The Jesuit New World Order

Thursday, 3 May 2012

Knights Templar History

Knights Templar History The
Knights Templar History started with the crusades of the Middle Ages, a
war between Christians and Moslems centered around the city of
Jerusalem.

The Knights Templar History and the importance of Jerusalem After
Christ was crucified on the cross, his body was laid in a tomb, now
known as the Holy Sepulchre. Legend states that about three hundred
years after the death of Christ, Helena, the mother of the Christian
Roman Emperor Constantine, discovered the Holy Sepulchre and her son
built the magnificent Church of the Holy Sepulchre over the sacred spot
in Jerusalem in 330 A.D.

Christian Pilgrims and Knights Templar History The
Church of the Holy Sepulchre commemorates the hill of crucifixion and
the tomb of Christ's burial. Pilgrims throughout the Middle Ages made
sacred pilgimages to the Holy city of Jerusalem.

Knights Templar History - JerusalemIn
A.D. 637 Jerusalem was surrendered to the Saracens. The caliph of the
Saracens called Omar gave guarantees for the safety of the Christian
population and because of this pledge the number of pilgrimages to
Jerusalem still continued to increase. In 1065 Jerusalem was taken by
the Turks, who came from the kingdom of ancient Persia. 3000 Christians
were massacred and the remaining Christians were treated so badly that
throughout Christendom people were stirred to fight in crusades. The
Knights Templar were formed to ensure the safety of the pilgrims of
the Middle Ages who flocked towards Jerusalem. Their original name was
the Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ.

Knights Templar History - the founding of the order In
1099 Crusaders led by Godfrey of Bouillon took Jerusalem back from the
Turks. The founding of the Knights Templar was initiated shortly after
this date by Bernard of Clairvaux, a member of the Cistercian Order.

Knights Templar History - the Temple of Soloman At
first the Knights Templar had no church and no particular place of to
live. In 1118, nineteen years after the freeing of Jerusalem, King
Baldwin II of Jerusalem, granted the Knights Templar a place to live
within the sacred enclosure of the Temple on Mount Moriah. This place
was amid the holy structures which were exhibited by the priests of
Jerusalem as the Temple of Solomon. The "Poor Fellow-soldiers of Jesus
Christ" became colloquially known as "the Knighthood of the Temple of
Solomon" and subsequently the Knights Templars.

Knights Templar History - the Master of the Order Hugh
de Payens was chosen by the knights to be the superior of their new
religious and military society. The new order took vows of poverty and
chastity, and the king granted them quarters within the Temple of
Solomon - hence their name Knights of the Temple, or Templar. Hugh de
Payens was known by the title "the Master of the Temple". Hugh De Payen
and the Knights Templar returned to France in 1127

Knights Templar History - the wealth of the Knights Templar The
first donation of land was given to the Templars in 1127 by Count
Thybaud of Champagne at Barbonne-Fayel, fifty kilometres north-west of
Troyes. Hugh de Payens was granted the land for the first Temple Church
in Holborn, London in 1128 where the original Knights Templar Temple was
built. The temple was the first round church and consisted of gardens,
orchard, boundary ditch and cemetery.

Knights Templar History - the Council of TroyesSt.
Bernard, Hugh de Payens travelled to Rome, accompanied by Geoffrey de
St. Aldemar as well as four other brothers of the order ( Brother Payen
de Montdidier, Brother Gorall, Brother Geoffrey Bisol, and Brother
Archambauld de St. Armand ). They were received with great honour by
Pope Honorius, who approved of the objects and designs of the holy
fraternity. The Knights Templar History moved on and in 1128 the
ecclesiastical Council of Troyes gave the Knights Templar official
recognition and granted their rule of the order. The Council of Troyes
was instigated by Bernard of Clairvaux and the Knights Templars were
represented by Hugues de Payen and Andre de Montbard. The Papal approval
at the Council of Troyes resulted in many new recruits joining the
order

Knights Templar History - the Rules of the Knights Templar Order In
1130, Bernard of Clairvaux drew up the rules for the new Knights
Templar order. Bernard set up the order with two main classes of
knighthood, the knights and sergeants or serving brethren. Sergeants or
serving brothers wore a black or brown mantle to show their lower
status, whilst the Knights wore a red cross granted by Pope Eugenius
III. Married men who joined the order could only join as sergeants,
their property coming into the possession of the Order rather than to
their wives upon their death.

Knights Templar History in Spain In
1130 the Knights Templar order were receiving privileges from Alfonso I
of Spain. The Templars helped the rulers of Catalonia and Aragon regain
land from the Moors. King Alfonso I granted the Knights Templar
exemption of tax on a fifth of the wealth taken from the Moors and on
his death he left a third of his kingdom to them. This was later
successfully contested but the Templars were given land in Aragon,
Catalonia, Valencia and Mallorca.

Knights Templar History in England In
1136 Hugh de Payen died and was succeeded by Robert de Craon as Master
of the Temple. The Knights Templar in England supported Stephen in his
efforts to gain the throne of England in 1136. Stephen became King of
England and the Knights Templar were awarded the wealthy manor of
Cressing.

Knights Templar History - the Knights Templar order becomes responsible to the Pope A
Papal Bull was issued in 1139 by Pope Innocent II, a protege of St.
Bernard of Clairvaux, stating that the Knights Templar should owe
allegiance to no one other than the Pope himself.

Knights Templar History - The Splayed Red Cross Emblem The
Knights Templar History saw 1146 as the year when the Knights Templar
order adopted the splayed red cross as their emblem. The Battle cry of
the Templars was "Beau-Séant!" which was the motto they bore on their
banner.

Knights Templar History - The second Crusade The
Knights Templar order supported the second crusade in 1148. The
decision was made to attack Damascus and armies were assembled in Acre.

Knights Templar History - London In
1154 under King Henry II of England , the Grand Master of Knights
Templar ( André de Montbard ) superintended the Masons. The Knights
Templar built their Temple in Fleet Street. The Knights Templar moved
their London temple to the new site between Fleet Street and the Thames
in 1161.

Knights Templar History - King Henry II and Thomas Becket Their
involvement in English politics increased as Richard de Hastings, the
Master of the English Templars, attempted to reconcile the differences
between King Henry II and Thomas Becket. Their attempts to reconcile the
two parties failed and Thomas a Becket was murdered in Canterbury
Cathedral in 1170

Knights Templar History - Jerusalem is taken by the TurksThe
army of Jerusalem and Guy of Lusignan, the King of Jerusalem, was
beaten by Turkish forces in 1184. All Knights Templar and Hospitallers
who survived the battle were executed afterwards. This event prompted
the Third Crusade headed by Richard the Lionheart who was supported by
the Knights Templar order. The city of Acre is taken by the Crusaders in
1191. Richard the Lionheart dies in 1199 and is succeeded by his
brother John.

Knights Templar History and Edward IThe
Knights Templar History goes on and in 1263 problems in England lead to
the Baron's revolt led by Simon de Montford opposing Edward I. On the
pretence of removing his mother's jewels, Edward I entered the Knights
Templar Temple in London and ransacked the treasury, taking the proceeds
to the Tower of London. In 1271 Edward leads another crusade and is
attacked by an assassin with a poisoned knife. He survives the attack
and his life was saved with drugs sent by the master of the Knights
Templar, Thomas Bérard. In 1272 King Henry III of England died and the
English Council met at the Temple in London and draft a letter to Prince
Edward informing him of his accession to the throne, illustrating the
political importance of the Knights Templar in England.

Knights Templar History - DefeatThe
Knights Templar suffer a huge defeat at Acre in 1291 and cease to be a
strong fighting force. More The Knights Templar are recruited after the
defeat at Acre but the new force are wiped out at Raud in 1302.

Knights Templar History - Knights Templars are charged with HeresyKing
Philip IV of France (1268-1314) who was already heavily in debt to the
Knights Templar requested a further loan. The Knights Templar refused
his request. King Philip IV subsequently ordered the arrest of all
Knight Templars in France. The order to arrest the Templars was sent out
several weeks before the date possibly giving the Templars time to hide
their wealth. On 11 October, two days before the arrest of many Templar
Knights, it is recorded in French Masonic history that Templar ships
left La Rochelle, heading to Scotland. On Friday the 13th, in October
1307, Jacques de Molay, the Grand Master of the Knights Templar, and 60
of his senior knights were arrested in Paris. They were charged with
heresy and accused of homosexual acts. Admissions of guilt were
extracted due to the use of torture. Pope Clement V initiated enquiries
into the order and thousands of Knights Templar were arrested across
Europe. The Medieval order of the Knights Templar become extinct in 1312
when the order is dissolved by the Council of Vienne. Anyone found
sheltering a Templar was under threat of excommunication. Much of the
Templar property outside of France was transferred by the Pope to the
Knights Hospitallers, and many surviving Templars were also accepted
into the Hospitallers.

Knights Templar History - The Death of the last Medieval Master The
Knights Templar leader Jacques de Molay and Geoffroi de Charney were
burnt at the stake on March 18th 1314 for rescinding their former
admission of heresy under torture. Jacques de Molay cursed the Pope and
King Philip and prophesied that they would soon die. Pope Clement V was
dead within 40 days and King Philip died that year. Jacques de Molay was
the last Master of the Knights Templar.

The Crusades

The History of the Crusades:

The
Crusades of the Middle Ages were an almost continuous series of
military-religious expeditions made by European Christians in the hope
of wresting the Holy Land from the infidel Turks. From 1096 until nearly
1300, Crusaders, traveling in great armies, small bands, or alone,
journeyed into the Orient to wage war against the Moslems, who had
become a serious threat to Christianity. Although many went for worldly
gain, it was religious faith that inspired thousands upon thousands of
these "soldiers of the Cross." When the Crusades began, Europeans were
still living in the so-called Dark Ages; before they were ended, the
West stood upon the threshold of the modern era. The Crusades were not
wholly responsible for his progress, but none will deny that they
hastened the development of our modern world.

How the Crusades Began: The
Christians of Europe believed that pilgrimages to the Holy Land would
guarantee the forgiveness of their sins and the healing of their sick
bodies and souls. From the early 600's Jerusalem was held by the
non-Christian Arabs, but for many years their possession of the city had
disturbed the Christians little or none. Although Jerusalem was a
hallowed shrine from them and for all other Moslems, as well as for
Christians and Jews, the Arabs had not only let the pilgrims come and go
at will but had also permitted Christians to settle and live peacefully
in the Holy Land.

By 1071, when the Seljuks, a less civilized
and less tolerant tribe of Turks, captured the Holy City, the situation
had changed. Soon the Sacred Places were being desecrated and destroyed;
Christian settlers ere mistreated; and pilgrims were persecuted. In the
same period the Turks threatened to overwhelm the entire Byzantine
Empire and then drive all Christians out of the East. Alexius the
Byzantine Emperor, appealed to the Pope at Rome for aid. At a church
council held at Clermont in southeastern France in November, 1095, Pope
Urban II called upon the faithful to "take up the cross" in Christ's
behalf, rescue Christ's Sepulcher from the infidels, and save the
Christian Byzantine Empire.

Urban's historic speech set in motion
the whole crusading movement. Fired with religious fervor, people of
all ranks clamored to join in the righteous cause that God had willed. A
cross of red cloth worn upon the breast became the symbol of the
departing Crusader {a word derived from the Latin crux, meaning cross}.

The First Crusade {1096 - 1099}

The
People's, or Peasants', Crusade: By the spring of 1096, before the
First Crusade was officially launched, Peter the Hermit and other
wandering preachers had collected a number of motley armies, composed of
peasants, vagrants, beggars, women, and children. Driven by fanatical
zeal, these ignorant, disorderly, penniless crews set out from France
and the Rhineland for the Holy Land - more then two thousand miles away.
Three of the mobs were destroyed or scattered in Hungary, in payment
for their lootings, murders, and other outrages; but in July a group led
by Walter the Penniless, a poor knight, and another led by peter the
Hermit finally joined forces in Constantinople forming the first
Crusade.

After causing grave disturbances in the Byzantine
capital, the peasants who had survived the terrible march across Europe
pushed on into Asia Minor, where the Turks massacred them. Peter the
Hermit, who remained in Constantinople at this time, was one of the few
members of the People's Crusade who lived to reach the heart of the Holy
Land.

The Princes' Crusade: Meantime,
European princes, barons, and knights had been assembling and setting
forth. From the spring of 1096 through the spring of 1097 they traveled
by land and by sea toward their goal. Major groups included the French
and German volunteers under Godfrey of Bouillon, Duke of Lorraine, and
his brother Baldwin; Frenchmen under Raymond, Count of Toulouse, and
Bishop Adhemar, the Pope's legate; and Frenchmen and Normans under
Bohemund and Tancred. These and other armies make up of wealthy nobles,
humble monks, professional warriors, merchants, farm hands, vagabonds,
and criminals, followed various routes to reach the common destination.
And their purposes also varied. Most were inspired by religious faith,
but many sought adventure, opportunity, power, or wealth.

The
Crusaders began crossing over into Asia Minor in May 1097, and after a
long and harrowing March, spent the winter outside mighty Antioch. In
June 1098, they captured the city, only to be besieged in their turn by a
powerful Turkish army. Death and desertions sapped the strength of the
Crusaders, and their morale collapsed; but the discovery of a spear,
which they believed to be the one used to wound the crucified Christ,
inspired them to rise up and overthrow the Turks. On July 15, 1099 after
six weeks of siege, the weak remnants of the Christian armies captured
the Holy City of Jerusalem. Covered with the blood of massacred Turks,
the victors knelt at the Holy Sepulcher, thus bringing to successful
conclusion the only crusade to be motivated principally by religious
zeal.

After the death of Godfrey of Bouillon, who was made ruler
of Jerusalem and named "Advocate of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher",
the Kingdom of Jerusalem was established with Baldwin as its monarch in
1100. To the north other European princes set up the Christian states of
Edessa, Tripoli, and Antioch. Many Europeans were attracted to the
East, and three religious-military orders - the Knights of St. John
{Hospitalers}, the Knights Templar, and the Teutonic Knights - were
formed to defend and care for the pilgrims who streamed into the Holy
Land.

The Second Crusade and Third Crusade

The Second Crusade {1147 - 1149}: Stirred
by the new that the Christian County of Edessa had fallen to the
Moslems, the French monk St. Bernard of Chairvaux called for another
great expedition to the East. Louis VII, King of France, and Conrad III,
the German Emperor, led this crusade, which was to poorly manage that
nothing was accomplished. Nevertheless, thousands of Crusaders,
traveling singly or in small bands, continued moving into Asia Minor.

The Third Crusade {1189 - 1191}: In
1187 the great Moslem leader Saladin captured the Holy City with a huge
Turkish army. When this news reached Europe, the Third Crusade got
under way. Its leaders were the most powerful rulers of the West: the
German Emperor Frederick I, called "Barbarossa" {Red Beard}; Philip
Augustus, King of France; and King Richard the Lion-Hearted of England.
Although it was the most famous and colorful of all the military
expeditions into the East, this Crusade, too, ended in failure.

While
the German army was crossing a river in Asia Minor, after the long
overland march from the west, the aged Frederick was drowned. Leopold of
Austria took his place. The English and French Crusaders reached the
Holy Land by ship and liberated the Christian city of Acre {July 1191},
which the Turks had been besieging for almost two years. Then Richard
quarreled with his hated French rival, and Philip returned to France.
Although he was unable to recapture the Holy City, Richard, the only one
of the three kings to continue the campaign, finally obtained a three
year treaty in which Saladin agreed to permit Christians to visit the
Holy Sepulcher without being disturbed. Christian control over the
eastern shores of the Mediterranean was maintained.

Thirteenth-Century Crusades

The Fourth Crusade {1202 - 1204}: Called
the arms by Pope Innocent III, the warriors of the Fourth Crusade
determined to attack the Moslems in the Holy Land from Egypt. To reach
Egypt, they needed the assistance of the ship-owners of Venice, and to
obtain this assistance they had to help the Venetians crush Zara, a
commercial rival of Venice on the Adriatic, and pillage Constantinople.
The protests of the Pope failed to halt their attacks on these two
Christian cities. As a result of the conquest of Constantinople in April
1204, the Byzantine Empire fell to the "Latins", who held it fro more
than half a century. The victories of the Fourth Crusade were purely
commercial and political; the situation in the Holy Land remained
unchanged.

The Children's Crusade {1212}: This tragic
expedition was made by bands of French and German children, who marched
to Mediterranean ports, convinced that the sea would dry up and permit
them to reach the Holy Land. No such miracle occurred, and several
shiploads of the children were carried into slavery in Turkish
territories. The remainder perished, straggled back home, or wandered
aimlessly around Europe. The pathetic story of a band of German children
lost in this terrible crusade may have inspired Robert Browning's
famous poem, "The Pied Piper of Hamelin".

Later Crusades: Most
of the crusades, which followed accomplished little. The Pope pushed
the German Emperor, Frederick II, into leading the Fifth Crusade {1228 -
1229}. Although Jerusalem passed into Christina hands as a result of a
treaty obtained by Frederick, the Turks recaptured it in 1244. The Sixth
{1248 - 1254} and Seventh {1270} Crusades, led by the devout Louis IX
of France, failed to liberate the Holy City, which remained in Moslem
hands until World War I. The fall of Acre in 1291 put an end to
Christian rule in the Holy Land. A few Christian traders remained, but
the day of the Crusader and the Western conqueror and settler was past.

Importance of the Crusades

As
military campaigns, the Crusades were a failure, but indirectly, and to
some extent directly, they affected much of the European history that
followed. Numerous important social, cultural, and economic changes took
place during and immediately after these famous expeditions. While few
of these developments can be flatly labeled as results of the Crusades,
almost all were stimulated by the increased interchange between East and
West that the Crusades brought about.

Trade and Commerce: During
and after the Crusades trade between Italy and the ports at the eastern
end of the Mediterranean were tremendously increased, and wealth was
circulating as never before. By the time European nobility had begun to
look upon such imports as Oriental rugs and perfumes as essentials, the
growing middle class of merchants and craftsmen was demanding the new
foodstuffs, such as cane sugar, rice, garlic, and lemons, and textiles,
such as muslin, silk, and satin, from the East, which naturally became
less expensive as the shipments increased in size. Natural, too was the
growth of towns and cities in this period. Goods brought into Europe had
to be distributed, and as trade increased, so did the towns and cities
along the inland trade routes. The larger galleys and sailing vessels
built to carry Crusaders were also used to bring luxuries of the Orient
to the courts of England and Scandinavia.

The Crusades affected
finance and business practice in Europe. Gold coins were minted and
letters of credit came into use for the convenience of the Crusaders. To
finance the expeditions, the wealthy were taxed, and serfs were allowed
to buy their freedom and sometimes the land on which they worked. Thus
the number of small landowners was increased, and the feudal system was
weakened. Western gold was widely distributed through the purchase of
supplies and Oriental wares.

Social Change and Intellectual Growth

Growth
from the Crusades: In weakening the feudal system, the Crusades
stimulated the development of a new class of free farmers and townsmen.
In some parts of Europe wealthy "merchant princes" arose to take the
place of the many nobles who were killed in the Crusades or who settled
permanently in the East; in France the monarchy was greatly strengthened
by the waning of the nobles' power.

Contact with the East and
new contacts among the various peoples of Europe led to the exchange of
ideas, customs, and techniques. Thus the Crusades helped to break down
the barriers of ignorance and isolation. During this period, interest in
geography and navigation was tremendously stimulated; better maps were
drawn; and more and more sea captains adopted the Arabs' crude mariner's
compass and astrolabe. Equipped with new knowledge and urged on by
their desire for the fabled riches of the Orient, European navigators
continued to seek better routes to the Far East until finally they not
only sailed around Africa but also discovered the New World.

The
Crusades encouraged Europeans to attempt to grow the crops and
manufacture the products introduced from the East. The Eastern windmill
and irrigation ditch became common in parts of the Continent. Often
Eastern artists and craftsmen were imported to decorate the great
double-walled stone castles, based on Eastern models, which the nobles
of Europe erected. Native artisans learned from these innovations. New
military tactics and equipment, as well as chivalric traditions
involving heraldry and tournaments, were introduced from the East.
Western writers adapted many Oriental stories, and quantities of
history, fiction, and combinations of the two gave the Crusades a
permanent place in European literature. Popular ballads about the great
expeditions provided the illiterate masses of Europe with both pleasure
and information.

Good and Evil from the Crusades: The Crusades
played a prominent part in the exciting developments, which occurred in
this period, although they were usually a cause, rather than the cause,
of change. The developments were both beneficial and harmful. The Church
gained great wealth. But wealth brought worldliness; the use of
violence for a religious end and the association of religion with
political and economic aggression troubled many thinking men; and the
teachings of Byzantine philosophers weakened the faith of many
Crusaders, some of whom became Moslems.

During the Crusades,
Europeans came into contact with a civilization, which was, in many
ways, more advanced than their own. Yet many brought back from the East
nothing more than a taste for luxury. Despite the example of humane
tolerance set by such an Eastern leader as Saladin, European warriors
frequently returned from the Crusades to lead campaigns of violent
persecution against religious minority groups. Thus the after effects of
the Crusades, like the Crusades themselves, were a mixture of good and
evil.

Grand Masters of the Knights Templar

Jacques de Molay

In
the two centuries of their known existence the Knights Templar served
under twenty-three Grand Masters. It is Jacques the twenty-third
and last Grand Master however, who is best known.

Little
is known of Jacques childhood, except that he was born in the
year 1244 in an area called Vitrey, Department of Haute Saone, France.
but what is known is that in 1265 at the age of twenty-one, he joined
the Knights Templar. The Knights Templar were an organization sanctioned
by the Roman Catholic Church in 1128 to guard the road between
Jerusalem and Acre, an important port city on the Mediterranean Sea. The
Order of Knights Templar participated in the Crusades and earned a name
for courage and heroism.

Like many that sought out the Order of
the Temple, Jacques joined seeking the thrill of battle with the
infidel. In his later years he reflected on how he and his fellow
knights silently grumbled about then Grand Master William of Beaujeu and
his pacific attitude towards the Mamlukes who at that time occupied the
Holy Land. It seemed that the young Templars were not found of King
Edward's truce with the enemy, for it did little to add their blood to
the Templar's swords.

The Last Grand Master of the Knights Templar Jacques DeMolay

Jacques
DeMolay rose through the ranks quickly and spent a great deal of time
in Britain. He was first appointed the position of Visitor General and
latterly to the post of Grand Preceptor of all England.

On the
death of the 22nd Grand Master, Theobald Gaudin, Jacques DeMolay was
named Grand Master of the Knights Templar, a position of power and
prestige. As Grand Master however, Jacques DeMolay was also in a
difficult position. The Crusades were not achieving their goals. The
non-Christian Saracens defeated the Crusaders in battle and captured
many vital cities and posts. The Knights Templar and the Hospitalers
(another Order of Knights) were the only groups remaining to confront
the Saracens. Almost immediately Jacques DeMolay moved from England to
the island of Cyprus, so that the Knights Templar could reorganize and
regain their strength while waiting for the general public to rise up in
support of another Crusade. It would be on the island of Cyprus that
Jacques DeMolay would remain until Philip IV and Clement V summoned him
to France in the autumn of 1307.

Instead
of public support, however, the Knights attracted the attention of
powerful lords, who were interested in obtaining their wealth and power. In
1305, Philip the Fair, King of France, set about to obtain control of
the Knights Templars. They had been accountable only to the Church. To
prevent a rise in the power of the Church, and to increase his own
wealth, Philip set out to take over the Knights. The year 1307 saw the
beginning of the persecution of the Knights. Jacques DeMolay, along with
hundreds of others, were seized and thrown into dungeons. For seven
years, Jacques DeMolay and the Knights suffered torture and inhuman
conditions. The inquisitors would go to any means to extract the
confessions that would damn the order in the eyes of the people and the
Catholic Church While the Knights did not end, Philip managed to force
Pope Clement to condemn the Templars. Their wealth and property were
confiscated and given to Philip's supporters.During
years of torture, Jacques DeMolay continued to be loyal to his friends
and Knights. He refused to disclose the location of the funds of the
Order and he refused to betray his comrades. On March 18, 1314, DeMolay
was tried by a special court. As evidence, the court depended on a
forged confession, allegedly signed by Jacques DeMolay. He disavowed the
forged confession. Under the laws of the time, the disavowal of a
confession was punishable by death. Another Knight, Guy of Auvergne,
likewise disavowed his confession and stood with Jacques DeMolay.King
Philip ordered them both to be burned at the stake that day, Jacques
DeMolay was then taken to an island on the Siene and burned along with
Guy of Auvergne the Preceptor of Normandy. There are many accounts of
Jacques DeMolay's dying words, but the one of the foremost Templar
scholars records them as follows:"It
is just that, in so terrible a day, and in the last moments of my life,
I should discover all the iniquity of falsehood, and make the truth
triumph. I declare, then, in the face of heaven and earth, and
acknowledge, though to my eternal shame, that I have committed the
greatest crimes but it has been the acknowledging of those which have
been so foully charged on the order. I attest - and truth obliges me to
attest - that it is innocent! I made the contrary declaration only to
suspend the excessive pains of torture, and to mollify those who made me
endure them. I know the punishments which have been inflicted on all
the knights who had the courage to revoke a similar confession; but the
dreadful spectacle which is presented to me is not able to make me
confirm one lie by another. The life offered me on such infamous terms I
abandon without regret."Reports
say they were slowly roasted over a hot, smokeless fire prolonging
their agony as their flesh slowly cooked and blackened. Jacques
insisted that his hands were not to be bound so that he could pray in
his final moments and before he died he cursed both Philip and Pope
Clement, summoning both of them to appear before God, the supreme judge,
before the year was out. His last words were, "Let evil swiftly befall
those who have wrongly condemned us - God will avenge us." Guy of is reported to have added, "I shall follow the way of my master
as a martyr you have killed him. You have done and know not. God
willing, on this day, I shall die in the Order like him."

The
chilling irony of the conclusion of this story is that Jacques final words did, in fact, come true. Pope Clement V died only a
month later on April 20th (he is suspected of having cancer of the
bowel) and Philip IV was killed while on a hunting trip on November 29th
1314. True to the claim both men did indeed die within the year of
Jacques own death.

Hughues de Payen - The First Grand Master

Hughues de Payen - The First Grand MasterTraditional
history tells us that Hugues de Payens and Geoffrey de St. Omer arrived
at the palace of King Baldwin II with the desire to defend Christian
pilgrims from the attack of the infidels. While this is a romantic
notion, there seems to be strong evidence that de Payens was already in
the holy land and in fact may have served in the army of
Boullion during the First Crusade.

Hugues de Payens - The First Grand Master of the Knights Templar

John
J. Robinson, in his book, "Dungeon Fire and Sword," makes the claim
that de Payens was 48 years of age when he became the first Grand Master
of the Order having already served in the Levant for 22 years.One
of the earliest chroniclers of the Order, Archbishop William of Tyre,
who wrote about the Templars some several decades after the formation
tells of the formation of the Order in the following words:"In
this same year [1118] certain pious and god-fearing nobles of knightly
rank, devoted to the Lord, professed the wish to live perpetually in
poverty, chastity and obedience. In the hands of the patriarch they
vowed themselves to the service of God as regular canons. Foremost and
most distinguished among these men were the venerable Hugh de Payens and
Godfrey de St. Omer. Since they had neither a church nor a fixed place
of abode, the king granted them a temporary dwelling place in his own
palace, on the north side of the Temple of the Lord. Under certain
definite conditions, the canons of the Temple of the lord also gave them
a square belonging to the canons near the same palace where the new
order might exercise the duties of its religion."William Of Tyre (Written several decades after the formation of the Templars)Little
is actually known of de Payens youth other than that he was a knight
from the area of Champagne in Burgundy. His lord was Hugh count of
Champagne who had granted lands to the young Bernard of Fontaines (later
to be canonized St. Bernard) to build Clairvaux abbey and latterly
joined the Order himself.Relying
on tradition once again we are told that this fledgling operation
consisted of but nine knights who took vows of poverty, chastity and
obedience at the feet of the Patriarch of Jerusalem. While most accounts
insist on the total being nine members, the recorder history counts
eight. Along with Hugues de Payens and Geoffrey de St. Omer, were Payen
de Montdidier, Archambaud de St. Agnan, Andre de Montbard, Geoffrey
Bisol, and two knights recorded only by their Christian names of Rossal
and Gondemar. The ninth member remains unknown although some have
suggested that it was Hugh Conte de Champagne.Perhaps
most important of these additional knights is Andre de Montbard who
was, despite being younger than Bernard of Clairvaux actually his uncle.
De Montbard would later become Grand Master of the order himself. It is
the addition of de Montbard and the Count of Champagne that begins to
paint interconnectedness to the order that cannot be a mere coincidence.It
is said de Payens and his men accepted no new members for the first
nine years. While theories as to why this is generally tend to run
rampant with recent authors speculating everything from the order
finding the Holy Grail to the severed head of Christ Himself, the truth
of the matter may be somewhat simpler.Desmond
Seward in his book, The Monks of War, puts forth the theory that the
order was on the verge of dissolving due to the lack of members. Seward
contends that Hugh sought out Bernard for his support to save the
failing Order.Whether this
is true or not remains to be conclusively proven, but what remains
essentially true is that de Payens and company left the Levant for
Europe in order to solicit funds and recruits. At the Council of Troyes
on January 13, 1129, the Templars would receive a Rule of Order penned
in part by Bernard of Clairvaux himself. Latterly Bernard's letter of
exhortation would propel the Order of the Temple to dizzying heights of
fame and fortune.Hugues de
Payens would see the order through nearly 20 years until his death in
1136. The Historian Charles Addison recounts the life of de Payens in
his book, "Knights Templars" in the following glowing terms:"1130.
Hugh de Payens, having now laid in Europe the foundations of the great
monastic and military institution of the Temple, which was destined
shortly to spread its ramifications to the remotest quarters of
Christendom, returned to Palestine at the head of a valiant band of
newly-elected Templars, drawn principally from France and England. On
their arrival at Jerusalem they were received with great distinction by
the king, the clergy, and the barons of the Latin kingdom.Then
the days of Hugh de Payens drew to a close. After governing the Order
for twenty-one years, and seeing it rise and hold the highest position
among the warrior bands of Palestine under his care, and the continued
patronage of St. Bernard, who never failed, while writing to the East,
to mention it with honor, and to recommend it to the notice of kings and
nobles, this gallant soldier of the Cross died in 1139. Everything that
is estimable in man is to be discovered in the character of de Payens;
no word of calumny has been breathed by the noble and the just upon this
truly great man; and though some later writers have attempted to
blacken his fair fame. There can be little doubt that no dishonorable
action sullied his life, and that he descended to the tomb, as he had
lived, without reproach." (Charles Addison Knights Templars)

Templar History

The
Templar Knights were a monastic order of knights founded in 1112 A.D.
to protect the pilgrims along the path from Europe to the Holy Lands
(Jerusalem). They took a vow of poverty which was rare for knights which
had to supply themselves with a horse, armor and weapons.Their
seal became two knights on one horse to show how poor they were. There
were also other various interpretations of the seal. They became very
powerful and influential in European political circles since Pope
Innocent II exempted the Templars from all authority except the Pope.Because
the Knights Templars regularly transmitted money and supplies from
Europe to Palestine, they gradually developed an efficient banking
system unlike any the world had seen before. Their military might and
financial acumen caused them to become both feared and trusted. Because
of their unselfish defense of the Holy Lands and their monastic vows,
they amassed great wealth through gifts from their grateful benefactors.They
soon had an army and a fleet as well as surplus money. Since the
Knights had taken a vow of poverty they re-invested the money and lent.The
Knights Templar were the earliest founders of the military orders, and
are the type on which the others are modeled. They are marked in
history, by their humble beginning, by their marvelous growth, and by
their tragic end.Their Humble Beginnings:Immediately
after the deliverance of Jerusalem, the Crusaders, considering their
vow fulfilled, returned in a body to their homes. The defense of this
precarious conquest, surrounded as it was by Mohammedan neighbors,
remained.In 1118, during the reign of Baldwin II, Hugues de
Payens, a knight of Champagne, and eight companions bound themselves by a
perpetual vow, taken in the presence of the Patriarch of Jerusalem, to
defend the Christian kingdom. Baldwin accepted their services and
assigned them a portion of his palace, adjoining the temple of the city;
hence the title "pauvres chevaliers du temple" (Poor Knights of the
Temple).Poor indeed they were, being reduced to living on alms,
and, so long as they were only nine, they were hardly prepared to render
important services, unless it were as escorts to the pilgrims on their
way from Jerusalem to the banks of the Jordan, then frequented as a
place of devotion.

The Templars had as yet
neither distinctive habit nor rule. Hugues dePayens journeyed to the
West to seek the approbation of the Church and to obtain recruits. At
the Council of Troyes (1128), at which he assisted and at which St.
Bernard was the leading spirit, the Knights Templars adopted the Rule of
St. Benedict, as recently reformed by the Cistercians. They accepted
not only the three perpetual vows, besides the crusader's vow, but also
the austere rules concerning the chapel, the refectory, and the
dormitory.They also adopted the white habit of the Cistercians,
adding to it a red cross. Notwithstanding the austerity of the monastic
rule, recruits flocked to the new order, which thenceforth comprised
four ranks of brethren: the knights, equipped like the heavy cavalry of
the Middle Ages; the serjeants, who formed the light cavalry; and two
ranks of non-fighting men: the farmers, entrusted with the
administration of temporals; and the chaplains, who alone were vested
with sacerdotal orders, to minister to the spiritual needs of the order.Their Marvelous Growth:The
order owed its rapid growth in popularity to the fact that it combined
the two great passions of the Middle Ages, religious fervour and martial
prowess. Even before the Templars had proved their worth, the
ecclesiastical and lay authorities heaped on them favours of every kind,
spiritual and temporal. The popes took them under their immediate
protection, exempting them from all other jurisdiction, Episcopal or
secular. Their property was assimilated to the church estates and
exempted from all taxation, even from the ecclesiastical tithes, while
their churches and cemeteries could not be placed under interdict.This
soon brought about conflict with the clergy of the Holy Land, inasmuch
as the increase of the landed property of the order led, owing to its
exemption from tithes, to the diminution of the revenue of the churches,
and the interdicts, at that time used and abused by the episcopate,
became to a certain extent inoperative wherever the order had churches
and chapels in which Divine worship was regularly held. As early as 1156
the clergy of the Holy Land tried to restrain the exorbitant privileges
of the military orders, but in Rome every objection was set aside, the
result being a growing antipathy on the part of the secular clergy
against these orders. The temporal benefits which the order received
from all the sovereigns of Europe were no less important.

The
Templars had commanderies in every state. In France they formed no less
than eleven bailiwicks, subdivided into more than forty-two
commanderies; in Palestine it was for the most part with sword in hand
that the Templars extended their possessions at the expense of the
Mohammedans. Their castles are still famous owing to the remarkable
ruins which remain: Safed, built in 1140; Karak of the desert (1143);
and, most importantly of all, Castle Pilgrim, built in 1217 to command a
strategic defile on the sea-coast.In these castles, which were
both monasteries and cavalry- barracks, the life of the Templars was
full of contrasts. A contemporary describes the Templars as "in turn
lions of war and lambs at the hearth; rough knights on the battlefield,
pious monks in the chapel; formidable to the enemies of Christ,
gentleness itself towards His friends." (Jacques de Vitry). Having
renounced all the pleasures of life, they faced death with a proud
indifference; they were the first to attack, the last to retreat, always
docile to the voice of their leader, the discipline of the monk being
added to the discipline of the soldier. As an army they were never very
numerous.A contemporary tells us that there were 400 knights in
Jerusalem at the zenith of their prosperity; he does not give the number
of sergeants, who were more numerous. But it was a picked body of men
who, by their noble example, inspirited the remainder of the Christian
forces. They were thus the terror of the Mohammedans. Were they
defeated, it was upon them that the victor vented his fury, the more so
as they were forbidden to offer a ransom. When taken prisoners, they
scornfully refused the freedom offered them on condition of apostasy. At
the siege of Safed (1264), at which ninety Templars met death, eighty
others were taken prisoners, and, refusing to Deny Christ, died martyrs
to the Faith. This fidelity cost them dear. It has been computed that in
less than two centuries almost 20,000 Templars, knights and serjeants,
perished in war.These frequent hecatombs rendered it difficult
for the order to increase in numbers and also brought about a decadence
of the true crusading spirit. As the order was compelled to make
immediate use of the recruits, the article of the original rule in Latin
which required a probationary period fell into desuetude. Even
excommunicated men, who, as was the case with many crusaders, wished to
expiate their sins, were admitted.All that was required of a new
member was a blind obedience, as imperative in the soldier as in the
monk. He had to declare himself forever "serf et esclave de la maison"
(French text of the rule). To prove his sincerity, he was subjected to a
secret test concerning the nature of which nothing has ever been
discovered, although it gave rise to the most extraordinary accusations.
The great wealth of the order may also have contributed to a certain
laxity in morals, but the most serious charge against it was its
insupportable pride and love of power.

At
the apogee of its prosperity, it was said to possess 9000 estates. With
its accumulated revenues it had amassed great wealth, which was
deposited in its temples at Paris and London. Numerous princes and
private individuals had banked there their personal property, because of
the uprightness and solid credit of such bankers. In Paris the royal
treasure was kept in the Temple. Quite independent, except from the
distant authority of the pope, and possessing power equal to that of the
leading temporal sovereigns, the order soon assumed the right to direct
the weak and irresolute government of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, a
feudal kingdom transmissible through women and exposed to all the
disadvantages of minorities, regencies, and domestic discord.However,
the Templars were soon opposed by the Order of Hospitallers, which had
in its turn become military, and was at first the imitator and later the
rival of the Templars. This ill-timed interference of the orders in the
government of Jerusalem only multiplied the intestine dessentions, and
this at a time when the formidable power of Saladin threatened the very
existence of the Latin Kingdom. While the Templars sacrificed themselves
with their customary bravery in this final struggle, they were,
nevertheless, partly responsible for the downfall of Jerusalem.To
put an end to this baneful rivalry between the military orders, there
was a very simple remedy at hand, namely their amalgamation. This was
officially proposed by St. Louis at the Council of Lyons (1274). It was
proposed anew in 1293 by Pope Nicholas IV, who called a general
consultation on this point of the Christian states.This idea is
canvassed by all the publicists of that time, who demand either a fusion
of the existing orders or the creation of a third order to supplant
them. Not even in fact had the question of the crusaders been more
eagerly taken up than after their failure. As the grandson of St. Louis,
Philip the Fair could not remain indifferent to these proposals for a
crusade. As the most powerful prince of his time, the direction of the
movement belonged to him. To assume this direction, all he demanded was
the necessary supplies of men and especially of money. Such is the
genesis of his campaign for the suppression of the Templars.It
has been attributed wholly to his well-known cupidity. Even on this
supposition he needed a pretext, for he could not, without sacrilege,
lay hands on possessions that formed part of the ecclesiastical domain.
To justify such a course the sanction of the Church was necessary, and
this the king could obtain only by maintaining the sacred purpose for
which the possessions were destined.Admitting that he was
sufficiently powerful to encroach upon the property of the Templars in
France, he still needed the concurrence of the Church to secure control
of their possessions in the other countries of Christendom. Such was the
purpose of the wily negotiations of this self-willed and cunning
sovereign, and of his still more treacherous counselors, with Clement V,
a French pope of weak character and easily deceived. The rumor that
there had been a prearrangement between the king and the pope has been
finally disposed of. A doubtful revelation, which allowed Philip to make
the prosecution of the Templars as heretics

After the Cathars:The Templars - used and
eliminated by Philip 'The Fair' of France

adapted from a thesis by Tafi Olsen

By
the eleventh century, the aggressive focus of the Western Church shifted from
the fear of paganism to the threat of heresy. Heresy was by 1200 thought to
be a terrible disease which could spread through Europe and infect the populace
with beliefs and practices threatening to Catholic dogma. The Holy Inquisition
was actively seeking out heretics and prosecuting them. Heresy was a dangerous
charge that could be used to destroy one's enemies, and when the unpopular
King Philip IV of France, called the Fair, heard a vague rumour about the
Knights Templar, a military monastic order formed during the Crusades, he
had an opportunity to do just that. Though the Templars could hardly be called
his enemies, they were a threat to his power and an obstacle between him and
the money he so desperately needed - for he had wrecked the economy of his
little (but important) kingdom, which at that time was little more than the
area of the present Ile-de-France.Throughout the Crusades
(1097-1291), pilgrims travelled to the dangerous Holy Land, and military orders
such as the Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem, also called the
Hospitallers, provided aid to the travellers. In 1118 nine knights, inspired
by Hugues de Payens, travelled to Jerusalem to offer their services to King
Baldwin II of Jerusalem in securing the safe passage of pilgrims, on the model
of the Hospitallers of St.John, whose order had been founded earlier. The
Poor Fellow-soldiers of Christ and of the Temple Solomon soon became known
as the Templars. For a while they occupied the el-Aqsa mosque (the third most
holy place in Islam), built on the ruins of the Temple of Solomon. The Knights
took their name from the Templum Domini, the Christian church founded
with typical arrogance on the Dome of the Rock.At the Council of Troyes
in 1128, the pope recognised the Templars as an official monastic order. Following
the Templars' example of monks who fight, the Hospitallers took on a rival
military rôle.The
Templars were a handy target for charges of heresy and immorality. Originally,
like most Christian orders, they stressed chastity, humility and poverty,
but, like almost all Christian orders, became - as an institution - immensely
rich, proud and greedy. Nobles from all over Europe gave vast amounts of wealth
and property to them. This could be because originally noble knights, princes,
and dukes joined the Order.. Not only did secular authorities give money to
the Templars, but the papacy and the state bestowed various privileges upon
them. For example, the Templars were exempt from taxes, tolls, and tithes;
and they were subject to no authority except that of the pope. They controlled
entry and exit from Palestine both economically and militarily. They had refused
to ransom Louis IX after one of his disastrous expeditions, thus incurring
the resentment of the royal house of France. Their occupation of Palestine
(like that of the Crusaders) was a series of war crimes.Their
headquarters was the massive Temple of Paris. (Vestiges of its donjon can
still be seen in the Square du Temple.) When Philippe 'le Bel' decided to
topple the Templars, he was able to tune into waves of resentment against
them. When he had tried to extract money from them they had refused, taken
their case to the Parlement (founded only in 1250 and largely an instrument
of the king) and won their case. The
Rule of the Order made them secretive and ritualistic. Secrecy implied wrongdoing
and heresy to the mediæval (as to any fundamentalist) mind. Philip knew
that a heresy charge would bring in the Inquisition, over which he had control
in France. In order to profit from the prosecution of the Templars, he needed
to prove that the Templars, as an institution, were heretical as well as debauched.Many
historians have studied the arrest and trial of the Templars, and most have
come to the conclusion that the Templars were innocent of the charges skilfully
devised by king Philip. Henry Charles Lea, in A History of the Inquisition
of the Middle Ages and The Guilt of theTemplars, provides an interesting
narrative on the prosecution of the Templars. Lea is a firm believer in the
innocence of the Order. He takes a positivist approach to the sources by using
them at face-value to come to the conclusion of the Templars' innocence. Also,
he shows his positivist perspective by discussing mainly the powerful men
involved, ignoring the other classes of people not mentioned in the sources.Others,
such as G. Legman, believe the Templars were innocent of the accusations.
Legman claims the Grand Master of the Templars was homosexual and that, moreover,
the Order was guilty of usury.
On the whole, though, most historians would agree the Templars were innocent
of these charges. Two
important works on the fall of the Templars are Norman Cohn's Europe's
Inner Demons and R. I. Moore's groundbreaking book, The Formation of
a Persecuting Society which is an important study on the persecution of
Jews, lepers, and heretics. He alleges that these three categories of people
were subjected to the same stock charges throughout the Middle Ages. Moore
believes it was necessary for Europe's rulers to persecute the "other"
through governmental institutions in order to secure control over the population.
By using the defining characteristics of the groups, and making those characteristics
dangerous, their persecutions were justified.and rulers became stronger. Thus
European monarchs used persecution to gain power by suppressing those who
could question their authority. Moore feels it was necessary for rulers to
make a given group of people the enemy in order to gain support from the general
population. Thus persecution became a mechanism of the state. Norman
Cohn was influenced by the annalist perspective in looking at Templar history.
He considered all aspects of Templar life from warfare to economic matters
to personal stories of the torture and trials, but differed from Lea in that
he did not just focus on the leaders of the Templars and the two important
men in the Order's story, King Philip and Pope Clement, but also discusses
lower members of the Order and peasant reaction to the trial. The
Templars' seemingly limitless wealth
was apparent when in 1147 King Louis VII of France borrowed a large amount
of money from them and repaid them with tracts of land in Paris (mainly the
Eastern part of the Marais). The Paris Temple (still remembered in the Métro
station and the rues du Temple and Vieille du Temple) became the headquarters
of Europe's finances. There, important jewels and money were held for monarchs.
Consequently, the Templars established an early system of international banking.
Because of their special papal privileges, they were exempt from local taxes
which created an unfair advantage over merchants. They were an autonomous
group, above secular law or authority and were perceived as arrogant.In
1291, the last Crusader stronghold fell to the Muslims in Acre, which signified
the end of the Crusades. The Templars were consequently left without a military
rôle. This left them in a precarious situation. They had made many enemies
over the years due to their special privileges and vast wealth. Many were
upset the Templars were not fulfilling their military duties by going back
to the Holy Land and fighting the Muslims.This is reflected in a poem by Rostan
Berenguier written sometime after the fall of Acre:Since
manyTemplars now disport themselves on this side of the sea, riding their
grey�horses or taking their ease in the shade and admiring their own fair
locks;since they so often set a bad example to the world; since they are so
outrageously proud that one can hardly look them in the face: tell me, Batard,
why the Pope continues to tolerate them; tell me why he permits them to misuse
the riches which are offered them for God's services on dishonourable and
even criminal ends. They waste this money which is intended for the recovery
of the Holy Sepulchre on cutting a fine figure in the world; they deceive
people with their idle trumpery, and offend God; since they and the Hospital
have for so long allowed the false Turks to remain in possession of Jerusalem
and Acre; since they flee faster than the holy hawk; it is a pity, in my view,
that we don't rid ourselves of them for good.This
poem is a reflection of one person's thoughts about the Templars. It is unclear
how much Berenguier's poem reflects public opinion, but it is likely some
were bitter about the Templars lack of military service after the fall of
Acre and their vast wealth. In the poem, the Templars' wealth is frowned upon
because they were given money and property to help in the wars against the
Muslims. Furthermore, the Order is seen as cowardly because it was no longer
fighting. Basically, this poem reflects a negative view of the Templars as
rich, proud, and useless. Philip
manipulated the charge of heresy to destroy the Order of the Templars. Although
the definition of heresy has changed throughout the history of the Catholic
Church, it basically means any unorthodox or dissenting idea or belief that
is condemned in this case, by the Catholic Church. A heretic, in theory, was
a "dissenter formally condemned by an accepted ecclesiastical authority."
In the case of the Templars, the Inquisition was the authority involved in
determining the guilt of the Order. Heresy was considered to be extremely
threatening to the Catholic Church in the late Middle Ages (1250-1450). Often
it was perceived as a disease which could spread through and harm communities.
Pope John XXII described heresy as "a most pestilential disease besides
growing stronger and increasingly serious, grievously infests the flock of
Christ throughout the world". Heresy was a problem for the Church
because it led to contrary claims to church offices and could possibly lead
to division in the Church.Even
before the legalisation of Christianity in the Roman Empire, in 313 CE, there
existed people who thought differently from those with ecclesiastical authority.
Arianism, which distinguished the relationship between God the Father and
Christ, started as a local controversy. Arians did not believe God and Christ
were equal and thought Christ inferior to God the Father. The argument grew
until Emperor Constantine called together the Councilof Nicæa in 325
CE to resolve the matter. This established the policy of heresies being addressed
and adjudicated in church councils. After the Arian heresy, most major heretical
sects were condemned in church councils which made canonical laws prohibiting
them. Arius of Alexandria, the eponym of Arianism, wrote to Eusebius of Nicomedia
"The bishop greatly wastes and persecutes us, and leaves no stone
unturned against us. He has driven us out of the city as atheists, because
we do not concur in what he publicly preaches . . ." Already those
with dissenting beliefs were being publicly persecuted. The Council of Nicæa
formed the Nicene Creed to establish the universal orthodox beliefs. Right
after the legalisation of Christianity, heretics were being sought and persecuted
- as, later, 'pagans' would be and their temples and shrines destroyed.Occasionally,
the bishops needed an outside authority, usually the Roman Emperor, to resolve
differences in the church councils. Consequently, Roman Emperors after Constantine
saw it as their duty to be arbiters of Church policy. They involved themselves
in ecclesiastical laws. Emperors instituted anti-heretical laws in the fifth
and sixth centuries.They, a secular authority, established a tradition that
the Inquisition, an ecclesiastical authority, would follow of absolving the
guilt of heretics. If they confessed and were brought back into the Church.
The Theodosian Code of 438 contains laws regarding the prosecution of heretics
by secular authorities.One section of the Code states "if any heretics
. . . should embrace, by asingle confession, the Catholic faith and rites
. . . We decree that they shall be absolved from all guilt . . ."
Later Roman Emperors made laws that assigned death and property confiscation
to heretics. These are good examples of how there was a tradition of secular
authorities taking control of persecuting and absolving or punishing religious
heretics.After
the eleventh century, the Church took the lead in seeking out heresy. Pope
Lucius III, in 1184, issued the decretal Adabolendam which ordered
bishops to root out heretics in their area. This is most likely because new
forms of religious dissent had been forming in the twelfth century. Dualism,
which argued the existence of two gods, one benevolent and the other malevolent,
is one example.In Languedoc, in Southern France, dualist heretics took the
name Cathars or Albigensians.
Dualist ideas were spreading all over Europe. Ecclesiastical authorities were
writing canonical laws about punishing heretics. Pope Innocent III wrote the
decretal Vergenti sin 1199 which allowed for the goods and property
of convicted heretics to be confiscated. Finally, in 1209, the fear that heresy
was spreading led the papacy to launch a crusade against the Albigensians.
The 'Albigensian Crusade' lasted from 1209-1229 and ended with the slaughter
of many heretics, and huge confiscation of land, but did not fully destroy
all dualist heresy. To
fully understand both why and how Philip orchestrated the prosecution the
Templars as part of his grand plan to enlarge his dominion and his power,
Philip's past relationship with the Order and his financial problems should
be examined. Prior to his knowledge of the accusations agains tthe Templars,
Philip had relied heavily upon the Order. In 1304, Philip granted them new
privileges which turned the Temple into a virtually autonomous city-state
within Paris. He spoke well of them and had previously sought refuge in the
Paris Temple during a serious riot. Philip originally wanted to combine the
Templars and the Hospitallers into one military order to recapture Jerusalem
in a new Crusade and make himself king there. Others had tried before to combine
the two groups and failed. For instance, in 1274, Pope Gregory X tried to
combine the two military orders at the Council of Lyons without success. The
two orders were rivals and both wealthy, consequently they refused to be united.
Jacques de Molay, the Grand Master of the Templars, did not want to combine
with the Hospitallers because, he argued, the competition between the two
Orders made them more efficient and he predicted problems in the details of
the merger. Because the Templars were virtually autonomous, very wealthy,
and powerful, they most likely did not want to share their privileges.Philip
was also in a difficult financial situation. He desperately needed the Templars'
money. When Philip began his reign in 1285, the royal finances were already
strained. He married Jeanne of Navarre the same year and gained the counties
of Champagne and Brie. This was a major step toward his goal of state building
because he gained territory over which he could rule, but it further strained
his finances. Philip needed money to fight the English in Gascony and the
Flemish in Flanders. He was defeated in Flanders in 1302, but had finally
been able to assert his authority in 1305. This added the territory of Flanders
to his lands, helping him to create a strong state. Flanders was constantly
rebelling, and military expeditions to quell rebellion cost money. Consequently,
taxes were raised. Philip had, moreover, borrowed five hundred thousand livres
from the Templars for his sisters' dowry. He had taxed the people into revolt,
debased the coinage, and had previously confiscated the money of the French
Jews and expelled them from the kingdom in 1306. Even with the Jews' money,
he still needed the Templars' wealth. When the Templars and Hospitallers failed
to unite, Philip decided the best action would be to destroy the Templars.
He could then use their money to go to Jerusalem and become king. While
Philip was still struggling with his finances, an opportunity arose to destroy
the Templar Order. Prior to 1300, the Templars had not been accused of any
heretical acts. In 1305, an account began circulating that a Templar had in
prison confided to a Frenchman, Esquiu de Floyran, engagement in a number
of blasphemous and heretical acts This man subsequently gained the ear of
the king. Philip was a shrewd politician who quickly realised that the charges
could be used to destroy the Order. He then passed them on to�Pope Clement
V on November 14, 1305. Nothing else was done about the accusations until
August 1307 when Clement wrote back to Philip asking for proof of the charges
and telling Philip he would look into them. Philip acted quickly upon receiving
Clement's letter. For fear that the Templars would get wind of events and
flee, he secretly sent letters out all over France on September 14, 1307,
ordering the arrest of Templars and seizure of their property - which occurred
on October 13, 1307. The
accusations against the Templars consisted of 127 charges. Most of them centred
around the initiation ceremony and�can be divided into five separate categories.
First, it was alleged, the initiate was told to spit on the cross and renounce
Christ three times. He was then stripped naked and the initiator kissed the
initiate three times; on the mouth, on the navel, and on his lower back. The
initiate was then made aware that sodomy was practised in the Order and he
should engage in it if a fellow brother asked him. The next accusation was
that the cord which the Templars wore around their waists had been consecrated
by an idol which was deep "in a cave excavated in the ground, very
dark...an image in the form of a man over which is a human skin and shining
carbuncles for its eyes". This idol (whom the rumour-mongers called
Baphomet, a corruption of Mohamed) contained a secret book, which only
the Grand Master of the Templars and the elders knew about. The final accusation
was that the host was not consecrated in the Templars' mass. They
were also accused of "practising Sufism" and being connected with
Hussain Sabah, the leader of the Order of Assassins, wrongly accused (as anyone
who has smoked cannabis will know) of stoking up their alleged murderousness
with hashish or marijuana. Certainly the Templars were influenced by Sufism
(itself strongly influenced by Buddhism), which also influenced the whole
charade of Chivalry in Europe. Some
of the charges were for the most part standard charges used against several
other groups such as Jews, Cathars and other 'heretics', and lepers. All were
victims of an enthusiasm for persecution in Europe then - and since. From
the time of the first Crusade, Jews were associated with "sex, sorcery,
and the devil." This theme was repeated with regard to other groups
such as lepers and unorthodox sects. The Templars were also inevitably accused
of having abhorrent sexual practices and worshipping the devil through idolatry.The
lack of evidence surrounding the accusations leads most scholars to believe
the Templars were innocent of these charges. Henry Charles Lea, in A History
of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages, does not support their validity
because the confessions the Templars made under torture were mostly different
from each other. There was not one universal confession made by all members
of the Order. These Templars were also confessing under some of the worst
torture of the Middle Ages. At least twenty-five Templars are known to have
died under torture - but there must have been many more. The only proof of
the accusations against them was the confessions they made while being tortured.
In addition, Lea points out that had the Templars been trying to start a new
religion of idol-worship, they would most likely have carefully chosen their
initiates. Also, would not all the Templars know the new dogma ? In the confessions,
the descriptions of this supposed new religion were very different. Some Templars
said they renounced God, others said they renounced Christ. Some said they
saw the idol and it was black, others said white. Although Lea's views date
back to the 1950s, most scholars (but not all) concur.For
instance, G. Legman, author of The Guilt of the Templars, believes
they were guilty of the accusations. To begin with, he asserts that Jacques
de Molay, the Grand Master of the Templars at the time of the arrest, was
guilty of the charge of sodomy because he actually was homosexual. [It is
important to interpolate here, however, that anal penetration was overwhelmingly
a heterosexual activity up to the 19th century.] He alleges Molay
made a deal with the prosecutor that he would confess to sacrilegious charges
if he was not accused of sodomy. It is pointless to argue if Molay was or
was not homosexual because the charges were against the group as a whole.
It was imperative to prove the Templars were guilty, not one individual. Only
with the whole Order guilty of the charges could Philip destroy the Templars.
Legman also claims they were guilty of usury, which, although true, was not
one of the formal accusations made against them. Usury is the practice of
lending money and charging interest. Usury was deplored because it was against
Catholic teaching - but conveniently practised by Jews. While conceding that
none of the Templars agreed on what the idol they supposedly worshipped looked
like, Legman insisted that the charges against the Templars were not stock
charges because they were not accused of everything the Jews were - and so
they were guilty!To
the people of the time the charge of heresy was believable, partly because
the Templars were a secretive and ritualistic order. Their Rule, assigned
to them at the Council of Troyes in 1128, called for them to wear specific
clothes:We
command that all brothers' habits should always be of one colour, that is
white or black or brown. And we grant to all knight brothers in winter and
in summer if possible,white cloaks; and no-one who does not belong to the
aforementioned Knights of Christ is allowed to have a white cloak, so that
those who have abandoned the life of darkness will recognize each other as
being reconciled to their creator by the sign of the white habits: which signifies
purity and complete chastity.The
Rule is very specific about what the members can and cannot wear. It also
prohibits "pointed shoes and shoe-laces and forbid[s] any brother
to wear them . . . For it is manifest andwell known that these abominable
things belong to pagans." By forcing the Order to wear specific clothing,
and not allowing other orders to wear white mantles, the Templars were then
distinguished as a group set apart. The group was allowed to have long beards,
even though the Templars were religious men, to whom beards were normally
forbidden. These attributes seemed to make them separate and implied a cult-like
status. Because only Templars could wear white mantles and beards, they could
invoke the dislike and distrust of other clergy, the lower orders of which
were illiterate and often corrupt in any case.� After confession of heretical
acts or practices, a Knight Templar was forced to shave his beard and remove
his white Templar mantle - thus renouncing the Order.Templars
held chapter meetings where all outsiders were excluded and even the cracks
in the walls were filled to make sure others could not see what was happening
during their meetings. It was reported that a Templar would rather die than
tell what happened behind the sealed walls. This added to the feeling that
the Templars were a group set apart. They also held their meetings at night,
which many believed was connected with the practice of witchcraft. Paul of
St. Pere de Chartres described heretics at Orleans in 1022: "They met
on certain nights . . . each holding a light in his hand, and called a roll
of the names of demons." Because outsiders were not allowed at the meetings,
people could misinterpret what the Templars did that needed such secrecy.
The initiation ceremony was held in the dark in complete secrecy. If any Templar
talked about it, he was expelled from the Order. This explains why most of
the accusations against the Templars centre around the initiation ceremony.
Secrecy
has long been associated with evil. Throughout the history of the Catholic
Church, hundreds of thousands have been persecuted because they worshipped
in secret. Heretics were accused of "holding obscene rites in secret,
dark places . . . " In the Middle Ages, it was commonly believed
that evil had to avoid light. St. Bernard of Clairvaux, of course, lent his
devastating authority by declaring that heretics "practise in secret
things obscene and abominable . . ."Because
no outsiders were allowed to see what happened behind Templars' walls, people
naturally speculated with superstitious and diseased imaginings.. Philip capitalised
on heretiphobia by used a heresy charge to arrest the Templars. Consequently,
when they were arrested, most people had come to believe they were guilty
as charged, and a kind of Fifth Column working against the 'legitimate' order.
Several
rumours agglomerated around the Templars after their initial arrest. One was
that they would cook the bodies of babies and use the fat to anoint their
idol. This is a standard calumny that was attached to 'witches' and heretical
groups. For example, Paul of St. Pere de Chartres describes the heretics at
Orleans in 1022:They
met on certain nights . . . and each of them grabbed whatever woman came to
hand . . .and the child who was born of this foul union was put to the test
of the flames after the manner of the ancient pagans, and burned. The ashes
were collected .. . There was such power of diabolic evil in this ash that
anyone who had succumbed to the heresy and tasted only a small quantity of
it was afterwards scarcely ever able to direct his mind away from heresy and
back to truth.Another
example of this use of children is found in the accusations against the 'witches'
of Simmenthal who, in the fourteenth century, "stole children, killed
them, and then cooked and ate them, or else they drained them of their juices
in order to make ointment." Why
Philip attacked the Templars and not the Hospitallers - a monastic military
order just as the Templars were - was because the Templars were already thought
of as ruthless, not trusted by regular clergy who were very likely jealous
of the Templars' wealth and privileges. They were resented by secular authorities,
some of whom owed them a great deal of money. Then of course, the Templars
were uniquely secretive. Finally, after the fall of Acre, the Hospitallers
turned into a naval force and kept up their military duties while the Templars
did not. Eventually, the Hospitallers ended up running the islands of Malta,
where, appropriately, the language is a magnificent hybrid of Arabic and Italian.The
accusations of Esquiu de Floyran appeared at the right time. During the trial
of the Templars, Esquiu de Floyran assisted the Inquisition in the torture
of the members - which suggests he had some stake in destroying the Order.
There seems to be no indication to suggest that Philip was the originator
of the accusations against the Templars. It appears to simply have been opportune
for Philip to endorse and spread the accusations and give them a fatally-heretical
colour or twist for his own ambitious and financial ends. It
is important to understand that as a secular ruler, Philip used religious
institutions to destroy the Templars. By arresting them, he was fulfilling
his duty as both a secular ruler and a Christian because he was turning over
heretics to ecclesiastical authorities and serving Mater Ecclesia. However,
heresy charges were usually discovered by the Church through the wandering
mendicant orders (friars) and then turned over to the Inquisition to be tried.
Once found guilty, the heretics would sometimes be turned over to the secular
authorities for punishment. Pope Innocent III's Cum ex officiinostri
(1207) says, "Whatsoever heretic . . . shall be found therein, shall
immediately be taken and delivered to the secular court to be punished according
to law." Philip, on the other hand, having himself "discovered"
the supposed heresy of the Templars, turned them over to the Inquisition.
The Fourth Lateran Council, held in 1215, had made it punishable for secular
authorities not to turn over heretics. The third canon stated: "But
if a temporal ruler, after having been requested and admonished by the Church,
should neglect to cleanse his territory of this heretical foulness, let him
be excommunicated by the metropolitan and the other bishops of the province."
On the threat of excommunication by the Church, Philip and other rulers in
Europe, had to prosecute all heretics in their territories. The church councils
reflect the real fear of heresy throughou tEurope. The Church was so threatened
by heresy, it had to propose excommunication to rulers to insure their co-operation
in ridding Europe of this terrible disease. The third canon would legitimise
Philip's actions because it was his duty to scourge his land of harmful heretics
even though the responsibility for identifying them belonged to the church.By
initiating the arrest of a religious group subject to no one other than the
pope, Philip was indicating he was more powerful than Pope Clement. Since
the establishment of the Inquisition in 1184 by Pope Lucius III, secular
rulers had been involved in sentencing those found guilty of heresy. While
the Fourth Lateran Council gave Philip permission to rid his lands of heretics,
he upstaged the church by initiating the arrest of the Templars before the
pope could consider the charges, and himself took control of a religious institution
- thus asserting his authority over the pope.The
heresy charge meant the Templars would be brought before the Inquisition,
an institution Philip controlled in France. Philip's own confessor, Guillaume
Imbert of Paris, was the Grand Inquisitor of France and would be in charge
of the Templar trial. Imbert's job was to make the suppression of the Templars
legitimate - and to sideline the Papacy.The
torture that the Templars endured was extreme and ghastly. Bernard de Vado
was tortured by fire so badly that bones in his feet burnt off. This extreme
treatment produced quick confessions which Philip used to his advantage. He
sent transcripts of them to Clement �after the pope had sent him a letter
discussing his indignation at the French king because he had arrested monks
subject to no one other than the pope himself. In the letter Clement asked
Philip to turn over the Templars and all their possessions to two cardinals,
Berenger de Fredole and Etienne de Suissi. But Philip used the confessions
(brought about by torture) as evidence, to show the pope the Templars were
guilty and thus the cardinals were not required.The
confessions resulted in the pope sending out a papal Bull on November 22,
1307 to all the rulers in Europe, asking them to imprison the members of the
Order and hold their property. By forcing Clement to take this action (even
though he knew that the charges were trumped up) Philip outmanoeuvred the
pope.� Having issued his Bull, he could not retract it because the Templars
had already confessed their guilt, even though it was under torture. If the
pope decided later they were innocent, he himself would be committing heresy.
For the Third Lateran Council of 1179 stated:"Heretics and all who
defend and receive them are excommunicated." The Fourth Lateran Council
also stated: "We decree that those who give credence to the teachings
of the heretics, as well as those who receive, defend, and patronise them,
are excommunicated . . . " At this time in the Middle Ages, it was
thought that all who defended heretics were heretics themselves. It
is important for these events that Clement V was French and had been elected
pope with the strong support of Philip.� It is probable that there was an
agreement between Philip and Clement that Philip would pressure French cardinals
to elect Clement pope if Clement would help Philip at a later date. When Philip
had the Templars arrested without Clement's knowledge, he was able to go over
the pope's authority because Clement (though well aware of Philip's motivation,
and himself sympathetic to the Templars) was weak both politically and physicallyIn
October 1307, Philip publicly declared the guilt of the Templars in front
of the University of Paris, bishops, and other royal officials. He then summoned
the people in front of the royal palace to again denounce the crimes and heresies
of the Order. This happened all over France. Philip also sent self-justifying
letters to vassals and allies. Templars were also made to stand in front of
large groups of people and proclaim their guilt and ask for forgiveness from
the crowds.This use of propaganda legitimised Philip's actions against the
Templars and made it seem he was acting out of religious zeal. Thus
Philip was portrayed "not as accuser or prosecutor but as the hero
of a battle for the faith, the victor of a spiritual conflict which had already
been won by the spontaneous confessions made by the guilty enemies of true
religion." Working to establish a strong Nation State, he needed
to build up a sense of "us" versus the "other" to bring
about a feeling of unity: a practice universal amongst despots. With the people
behind him, he could persecute those whom he claimed would poison the body
politic. It was important Philip appear to be saving society from heresy because
of anger at his debasing of the coinage and levying of crippling taxes upon
the emergent merchant-class and bourgeoisie, whom he was in the process of
franchising to some extent by establishing the Estates General (which lasted
up until 1789) an assembly under his control. The confiscation of the heretics'
wealth was bound to boost the economy.As
previously mentioned, Philip had tried to conquer Gascony and and needed more
money to subdue and forcibly add such territories to his land. He also needed
cash�to send an army to Jerusalem and take back the Holy Land from the infidel.
Previously, in 1306, he had followed the Plantagenet example in England and
turned on the Jews (to whom he was in debt) in order to seize their resources.
Jews, like the Templars, were easy targets because of their distinguishing
characteristics and alien customs and religion. After their arrest and the
sequestration of their property, he, like England's Richard I, expelled them
- as Ferdinand and Isabella would do to the Spanish Jews, the Sephardim of
Sepharad, (Hebrew for Spain, as Ashkenaz is Hebrew for Germany) in
1492.His
behaviour towards the Jews was, of course, a precedent. A few weeks after
the Templar arrests, Cristiano Spinola, a Genoese politician, realised Philip's
reason for attacking the Order - probably because he also was a politician.
Most observers were not so likely to have put two and two together. At
a meeting to which Philip summoned the pope at Poitiers in May 1308, Philip
tried to persuade Clement to totally disband the Order. To exert pressure,
Philip had a large crowd of French nobles and clergy aggressively pursue the
matter with the pope. Philip then hinted that if Clement did not act soon,
the pope himself �would be suspected of heresy. Later, on October 1, 1310,
the Council of Vienne was convened to decide the Templars' fate. Their property
was placed in the hands of a commission, while the Templars for appearance
sake were allowed to defend their Order - unprepared. On March 28, 1310, 546
Templars assembled to defend themselves. Because Philip had been invited to
help the Inquisition, over which he had power, he did not allow those Templars
to be heard and at the Council of Sens in April 1310, had 54 Templars condemned
as relapsed heretics and burned before they could even retract their confessions.
The council had four more Templars burned a few days later to discourage others
from defending the Order. The rest either confessed and were 'reconciled'
to the Church or spent the rest of their days in jail until they were burned
at the stake. Philip
had pushed Clement into an impossible position by forcing the Templars to
confess and showing the confessions to Clement. When the pope sent out his
Bull in November 1307, he could not later retract his assertion of their guilt.
By doing so, as stated earlier, he would have himself been guilty of heresy.
Consequently, when other Templars came to him to defend the Order, he had
to destroy them to save himself. After the Council of Sens, seven others came
forward to defend themselves and Clement had them thrown in jail before hearing
them. On March 19, 1314, the leaders of the Templars, including the Grand
Master Jacques de Molay, were brought forth from jail. They publicly retracted
their confessions. This angered Philip who had them burned without a trial
as relapsed heretics. Philip had the power to do this because the Order had
already been condemned as a whole and it was written in the church councils
that secular authority had the power to punish heretics after they had been
proven guilty by the ecclesiastical authority. The Fourth Lateran Council
says: "Those condemned, being handed over to the secular rulers or their
bailiffs, let them be abandoned, to be punished with due justice." Philip
therefore had legitimate authority to burn relapsed heretics.In
other countries the Templars were not prosecuted, although they were ordered
by the pope to be taken into custody. In England, King Edward II wrote to
Clement begging him to ignore the accusations and to "resist the calumnies
of envious and wicked men." He was referring to Philip and was possibly
threatened by Philip's method of state-building. He also wrote to Europe's
other rulers and asked that they ignore the accusations also. However, because
Pope Clement had sent them a papal bull, Edward was forced to seize the Templars'
property, but the members of the Order were not put into prison. English law
did not incorporate torture and, consequently, the Inquisition had no power
there to force confessions from the Templars. Later, the inquisitors got permission
from the king to use torture "in accordance with ecclesiastical law."
The Inquisition was never successful in England, most likely because they
did not have a driving force behind the accusations like Philip. In Scotland,
Ireland, and Germany, little action was taken against the Templars. Some of
their property was seized but later there were accounts that the Hospitallers
were complaining that the Templars still had possession of some of their property.
Rulers in other countries who did not have anything to gain by the prosecution
of the Templars ignored the accusations.Eventually,
most of the Templars' property was given to the Hospitallers, and the Order
was abolished. It was decreed that those who would thereafter assume the Templar
habit would be excommunicated. Philip thus accomplished his goal of destroying
the Order and collecting their money. He did not have to pay back the debts
he owed them and he 'reclaimed' their treasure that he claimed belonged to
the growing kingdom of France. As he walked to the pyre
on the Îlot des Juifs (now Île du Square du Vert-Galant, a tiny
island in the centre of Paris), Jacques de Molay pronounced a curse on both
King Philip and Pope Clement, predicting that neither would live out the end
of the year (1314). The pope died just a month later from a mysterious disease,
while the king was killed a few months later in a riding accident.

WORKS CITED

PRIMARY
SOURCESDubois,
Pierre. The Recovery of the Holy Land. trans. Walther I. Brandt. New
York: Columbia University Press, 1956.Kors,
Alan C. and Edward Peters. Witchcraft in Europe 1100-1700: A Documentary
History. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1972.Peters,
Edward. Heresy and Authority I nMedieval Europe: Documents in Translation.
Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press,1980."The
Primitive Rule of the Templars." trans. Mrs. Judith Upton-Ward. Online:
ORB: The Online Reference Book for Medieval Studies. 4 Mar. 2000. <http://the-orb.net/encyclop/religion/monastic/t_rule.html>
SECONDARY SOURCESBarber,
Malcolm. The Two Cities: Medieval Europe, 1050-1320. London: Routledge,
1992.Cohn,
Norman. Europe's Inner Demons. New York: New American Library, 1997.
Lea,
Henry Charles. A History of th Inquisition of the Middle Ages. Vol.III,
New York: The Harbor Press, 1955.Legman,
G. and Henry Charles Lea. The Guilt of the Templars. New York: Basic
Books, Inc., 1966.Moore,
R.I.The Formation of a Persecuting Society: Power and Deviance in Western
Europe, 950-1250. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1987.Partner,
Peter. The Murdered Magicians: The Templars and Their Myth. Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1982.Peters,
Edward. Europe and the Middle Ages. New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 1997.Russell,
Jeffrey Burton. Dissent and Order in the Middle Ages: The Search for Legitimate
Authority. New York: Twayne Publishers, 1992.Russell,
Jeffrey Burton. Witchcraft in the Middle Ages. London: Cornell University
Press, 1972.

"There are many popularly believed myths about the Order of the Temple.
The first is that there is very little evidence surviving about the
Order. In fact, a great deal of evidence survives. It is true that the
central archive of the Order is lost: this was originally held at the
Order’s headquarters, at first in Jerusalem, then at Acre, then (after
1291) on Cyprus. After the dissolution of the Order by Pope Clement V in
1312 the archive passed into the possession of the Hospital of St John.
Presumably it remained on Cyprus and was destroyed when the Ottoman
Turks captured the island in 1571." [p. 8.]

"...a good deal of material about the Templars remains. The Order is far
from being a mystery." "Other myths about the Templars abound, It is
not true, for example, that the Templers were found guilty as charged in
1312; Pope Clement V actually declared the charges not proven, but
dissolved the Order because it had been brought into so much disrepute
that it could not continue to operate. The Templers were not monks...."
[p. 12.]

"The Order of the Temple was not destroyed because it had outlived its
purpose, because it was corrupt, or because it was in decline." [p.
236.]

"Historians from the Middle Ages to the present day have developed a
'model' of the rise and fall of the Templars: the pure ideals of the
first knights became contaminated as the Order grew rich and became
involved in politics; the Order became corrupt and greedy and
increasingly unpopular, and meanwhile the West lost interest in the
Crusades; so when Philip IV of France attacked the Order for its money,
no one defended it and the Order fell. This 'model' has gained wide
acceptance despite the fact that it is false, because it provides an
attractively simple explanation for the otherwise unjust and
inexplicable fall of the Order." [p. 240.]

"[Walter] Scott
and [George] Macdonald misused the Templars for literary effect, but
some writers deliberately developed the myth of the Templars for
political or religious purposes, even fabricating physical evidence in
order to 'prove' their arguments. The German Freemasons claimed that the
Templars were a secret society with esoteric knowledge, and that they
were destroyed because of this knowledge, which Philip IV wanted to
obtain. In 1796 Charles Louis Cadet de Cassicour portrayed the Templars
as part of a secret conspiracy which was behind the French Revolution
and the execution of Louis XVI, in revenge for the death of James de
Molay in 1314. Such writers were following the example of those who had
contrived the original charges against the Templars: projecting their
own fantasies and interests on to their victims. Most influental of
these writers with a historical-religious purpose was Joseph von Hammer
Purgstall, who in 1818 published a work called The Mystery of Baphomet Revealed.
Hammer wanted to discredit the Freemasons, and attacked the 'Templar
masons' in order to undermine the whole movement. He argued, using
archaeological evidence faked by earlier scholars and literary evidence
such as the Grail romances, that the Templars were Gnostics and the
'Templars' head' was a Gnostic idol called Baphomet. He did not realise
that Gnostics did not have idols and that Baphomet is simply the Old French word for the name Mohammad." [p. 242.]

"Recently the Templars' supposed secret knowledge has become associated
with the Turin shroud, the relic held by the cathedral of Turin, which
some believe to be the shroud of Christ. In 1978 it was suggested that
this shroud, which shows an image of Christ’s head, could have been the
famous 'Templars' head'. Modern scientific analysis, published in 1989,
has dated the shroud to the fourteenth century, probably to the 1320s or
1330s — after the dissolution of the Templars." [p. 244.]

"The Templers were not particularly secretive — no more so than other
religious Orders of their period, and certainly no more so than the
other leading Military Orders, the Hospital of St John and the Teutonic
Order." [p. 13.]

"Perhaps the Templars were particularly insistent about evicting
non-members of the Order from chapter-meetings, but there is no evidence
for this." [p. 14.]

"This book does not attempt to replace the great scholarly works on the
Order by Marie Luise Bulst-Theile, Alain Demurger, Alan Forey and
Malcolm Barber." [p. 15.]

Archbishop William of Tyre composed his history of the crusader states between 1165-1184:

"There was nowhere for them to live, so King Baldwin II (1118-31) gave
them his palace on the south side of the 'Lord’s Temple' or Dome of the
Rock (this palace was the Aqsa mosque, which the crusaders called
’solomon’s Temple')" [p. 23.]

William of Tyre wrote that the concept of the first Military Order
sprang from the Church and that they were the equivalent of monks.

Simon, a monk of St Bertin wrote around 1135-7 that the first Templers
were crusaders who decided to stay in the Holy Land after the First
crusade.

The Anglo-Normon monk Orderic Vitalis (1075-c. 1141) wrote in the 1120s or 30s
that they were pious knights but not monks. He does not record their origins.

Abbot Bernard of Clairvaux wrote a letter before 1136 that influenced
subsequent writers' view of the Templars as knights who lived like
monks. The uncertainty of subsequent writers over how the Order began
indicates that its founding was not noticed in the West at the time.

"Abbot Bernard had been present at the Council of Troyes in January 1129
when the Council established the Rule of the Order of the Temple and
gave the Brothers a habit." [p. 27.]

"However, Bernard’s role was played only after the Order had come into
existence. The survey so far has shown that contemporaries and
near-contemporaries were not sure when the Order of the Temple began, or
why it began, or who was responsible for its beginning." "Later writers
had heard other stories." [p. 29.]

"Describing their deeds after 1150, [William of Tyre] brushed over their
successes, minimised their positive role and emphasised their
failures." "Yet examination of William’s account and comparison with
other, often more contemporary sources, indicates that his picture of
the Military Orders was not accurate." [p. 87.]

Two templars on one horse with the banner of Beausant, as illustrated by
Matthew Paris. The British Library, BL Royal Ms 14, fol. 42v. [Plate
1.1.The Knights Templar in Britain, Evelyn Lord. p. 5.]

"It is difficult to say how many Templars there were in the Latin
East... but it has been suggested that the Orders of the Temple and the
Hospital could each put an army of three hundred Brothers in the field,
knights and armed sergeants (non-knights), as well as mercenaries or
hired soldiers." [pp. 53-54.] [See Forey, The Military Orders, pp. 68-9,
79.]

"Military Order castles were garrisoned by a small number of Brothers
and a large force of hired mercenaries. At the Templars' castle of Safed
in Galilee in the 1260s there were 50 knight-Brothers, 30 armed
sergeant-Brothers, 50 turcopoles (native lightly armed mercenaries) and
also 300 hired archers." [p. 62.] [Forey]

"On 6 April 1291 Acre, the last major European Christian stronghold in
the Holy Land came under attack from the troops of Sultan al-Ashraf
Khalil. The seige lasted over a month and the Muslims began their final
assault on 18 May. [p. 85.]

"The Order’s preference for calling an official 'commander' (Latin: preceptor) causes problems for modern historians trying to work out the Order’s leadership structure." [p. 117.]

"The standard was baucant (piebald), with a black and white
section. Contemporary illustrations differ over which part of the banner
was white and which was black. Matthew Paris, the chronicler of St
Albans Abbey, shows it with the upper section black and the lower
section white; the Order’s own frescoes at San Bevignate, Perugia, show
it with a white upper section (with cross superimposed) and a black
lower section." [p. 118.]

"Most of the poeple living in a commandery in the West would never have
fought the Muslims and were not expected to do so." "The non-military
sergeants or serving Brothers did manual work, such as carpentry,
looking after animals, working as smiths or stonemasons." [p. 128.]

Other people living in commanderies were hermits, servants and pensioners. [p. 136.]

"A Templar commandery was a busy place, a mixture of a secular farm
and/or industrial site and/or business centre, plus the daily round of
religious observance." [p. 137.]

"Officials of religious Orders had their own seals to validate documents
approved by the Order. The Master of the Temple’s great seal was
double-sided and showed the circular dome of the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre on one side and the Orders’s symbol of two knights on one
horse on the other. There was also a smaller, single-sided seal, which
showed the circular dome of the Holy Sepulchre." [p. 114.]

Seals of Brother Otto of Brunswich, commander of Supplingenburg, shows a
lion; that of William, Master of the Temple in Hungary and Slovonia,
1297, depicts a winged griffen; that of Bertram von Esbeck, Master of
the Temple in Germany, 1296 depicts an eagle with two six pointed stars.
[p. 108-09]

The seal of Templar officials in Yorkshire c.1300 shows a tower
with a pointed roof. The seal of Brother Roustan de Comps, commander of
the Order of the Temple at Richerenches, 1232, shows a single knight on
horseback, bearing a shield with a cross: probably St. George.

The seal of Brother Bertrand de Blancafort, Master of the Temple, 1168,
shows two knights on one horse and the reverse with the circular dome.
[p. 114, 116.]

The seals of the Masters of the Temple in England: of Aimery de St Maur,
1200, Robert of Sandford, , 1241, Richard of Hastings, 1160-85, and
William de la More, 1304, showed the agnus Dei the lamb of God. [p. 177, 180.]

"Complaints against the Templars' alliances with Muslims had some basis
in fact." "Such diplomatic contacts and a healthy respect for a
formidable enemy were essential for the Templars as part of their
struggle to defend Chrisendom in the east. Truces and alliances with
Muslims enabled the crusader states to live to fight another day. The
fact that Muslim writers always rejoiced over the Templars when they
were defeated and depicted them as evil enemies of Islam shows that,
despite these alliances and friendships, in reality the Templars always
remained what they claimed to be — fanatical warriors of Christ." [pp.
79-80;]

"After the Battle of Hattin on 4 July 1187, when Saladin’s army
destroyed the army of the kingdom of Jerusalem and captured King Guy and
the leading nobles, Saladin bought the Templars and Hospitallers who
had been taken prisoner and had every one of them executed." [p. 54.]

"As in the Holy Land, Christian rulers in Spain would also ally with Muslim rulers against other Christians." [p. 90.]

Charitable donations decreased with increased political stability in
western Christendom, a shifting pattern of piety to the personal away
from the institutional, and a shift in royal policy forbidding donations
of land without royal licence.

"All these changes reduced the income enjoyed by all religious Orders by
the early fourteenth century, They came at the same time (and partly as
a result of) inflation which reduced the value of money rents...." [p.
178.]

"They made money in the countryside not only from farming, but also from rents and from commerce and trade." [p. 188.]

In 1275 William de Beaujeu arrived in Acre to discover that the Order
"was in a weaker stare than it had ever been, with many expenses and
almost no revenues, as its possessions had all been plundered by the
sultan." [p. 83.]

"During the 1260s the people of the Holy Land watched with indignation
as European crusaders were diverted to fight papal wars in Sicily at the
same time as their castles were falling one by one before Baibars’s
inexorable advance." [p. 85.]

"As the thirteenth century progressed the kings of Aragorn complained
more and more that the Military Orders were not meeting their military
obligations. The Orders were genuinely short of money because of losses
in the Holy Land and a fall in pius donations to all religious Orders in
western Europe. The resources in their houses were not impressive." The
Templars' house at Huesca "with military obligations apparently only
expected to have to arm seven knights and three sergeants...." [p. 98.]

["...the survey in 1308 shows that the Templars' property was unkempt
and ruinous." "...there is no evidence of the luxuries or wealth that
the Templars were accused of possessing." "But when the value of goods
is compared with other inventories taken in the fourteenth century it
can be seen that the Templars' goods are on the same scale as those
found in peasant inventories, rather than what might be expected from a
manorial household." The Knights Templar in Britain, Evelyn Lord, p. 96, 43, 98.]

"From the 1250s the Templars, Hospitallers and Teutonic knights were
given or sold many castles by the secular nobility of the crusader
states, who could no longer afford to maintain and garrison them." [p.
59.]

The Templars held fourteen fortifications and two other properties in the
Iberian peninsula during the 12th and 13th centuries. [p. 92.]

The Templars held five fortresses and fourteen other properties in Eastern Europe. [p. 104.]

"...for the most part [Templar churches] were built in the local style,
even when the Order built from scratch. Clearly these Orders did not
bring in their own architects and masons from outside when they wanted
to build, but hired local workers on the spot." [p. 158.]
["One characteristic of Templar architecture was the church with a round
nave, presumed to have been modelled on Solomon’s Temple. This does not
mean that all Templar churches had round naves, or that all churches
with round naves once belonged to Templars." The Knights Templar in Britain,
Evelyn Lord, p. 25.]
["The list of expenses [for the London temple in 1308] included the
wages of those employed by the Order up to the time of the arrests. Adam
the Mason received 4d a day. As he alone is recorded as a mason, he was
probably employed for repairs to the fabric rather than any major
building work." The Knights Templar in Britain, Evelyn Lord, p. 26.]

"The Templars in particular also provided a range of financial services
for rulers. This could vary from making loans and looking after
valuables to running the royal treasury, as in France. The Templars were
not a bank in the modern sense of the word as their financial
operations were merely a sideline, a result of their need to store and
move large quantities of cash about Christendom. Money deposited with
them was not pooled and reinvested, but remained in its owners'
strongboxes within the Order’s treasury, and could not be accessed
without the owner’s permission." [p. 162.]

"All religious Orders were used by lay people as a safe deposit for
valuables, and were asked to lend money when lay people needed cash. The
Templars in particular became well known for providing these sort of
financial services for the same reason that they were used by kings as
almoners, treasurers, and money carriers: the Order had developed
systems for the collection, safe storage and transport of large sums of
cash and other valuables in the West for carrying to the East." [p.
188.]

"All religious Orders lent money, but as Christians were not allowed to
levy interest (this practice was called 'usury') they had to find other
ways of covering the cost of the loans. There were various ways in which
this could be done. Some Templar loans from southern France included a
clause in the loan agreement that if the coin depreciated in value
between the time of the loan and the repayment then the borrower must
add a fixed sum to compensate the lender. As the fixed sum would remain
the same however much the coin depreciated, it is likely that an
interest charge lay buried in this fixed sum. Again, if land was given
as the pledge for the debt, it might be stipulated in the loan
conditions that the produce from the land did not count towards the
repayment of the loan. Complaints of Templar greed could conceivably
have sprung from such clauses, but the complainers did not specify loans
as a particular cause of grief." [pp. 189-90.]

"The Templers did have ships to carry personnel, pilgrims and supplies
across the Mediterranean between the West and East and back, but if the
Hospital after 1312 is any guide they did not have more than four
galleys (warships) and few other ships, and if they needed more they
hired them. They certainly could not spare ships to indulge in world
exploration — in any case, their ships were not sturdy enough to cross
an ocean and could not carry enough water for more than a few days. The
Order had vast resources in land, but was always very short of liquid
capitol, which was needed to invest in fortifications and personnel in
the east." [p. 12.] [The Falcon and the Templar Rose are mentioned by
name in Malcolm Barber’s The New Knighthood. Piers Paul Read, in The Templars p. 271, claims eighteen galleys, without citation.]

"When the Templars had made their money in the West, they had to get it
out to the East. There has been some debate among scholars as to whether
any actual transfer of coin took place, but the latest view is that
coin was actually carried from the West to the East. This meant that the
Templars needed ships to carry their coin, as well as agricultural
produce, horses and personnel for the east. They also provided a secure
carrying service for pilgrims — safer and cheaper than hiring a
commercial carrier. These would have been heavy transport vessels rather
than warships. Much of the surviving evidence for Templar shipping
comes from the relevant port records or royal records giving permission
for the export of produce. At La Rochelle on the west coast of France
during the twelfth century the Templars were given several vinyards and
produced wine for their own consumption and for export; although the
cartulary of their house is lost, the records of the port of La Rochelle
show that the Templars were exporting wine by ship. This was not a
fleet in any modern sense: again, those would have been transport
vessels rather than warships, and the Templars probably hired them as
they needed them, rather than buying their own.

"The hierarchial statutes attached to the Templars' Rule, dating from
the twelfth century before 1187, refer to the Order’s ships at Acre
(Sectin 119), but do not state how many ships the Order owned. After
1312 the Hospital of St. John was mainly involved in sea-based warfare
and had an admiral in command of its marine operations, but only had
four galleys (warships), with other vessels. It is unlikely that the
Templars had any more galleys than the Hospitallers. The ships would
have been very small by modern standards, too shallow in draught and
sailing too low in the water to be able to withstand the heavy waves and
winds of the open Atlantic, and suited for use only in the relatively
shallow waters of the continental shelf. What was more, they could not
carry enough water to be at sea for long periods." [pp. 191-92.]

"... the Templars and Hospitallers accompanied [King James I of Aragon
(1213-76)] when he set out on crusade in 1269 — although he had to turn
back because of poor weather conditions at sea. During the voyage the
Templars' ship lost its rudder and James sent over his own ship’s spare
rudder, although one of his advisers opposed this, saying that the
Templars should have brought their own spare." [p. 97.]

"The earliest references to Templar ships outside the kingdom of
Jerusalem come in the first decades of the thirteenth century, when they
were operating at Constantinople and in the Bay of Biscay, In 1224 King
Henry III of England hired a Templar ship, 'the Great Ship' and its
captain, Brother Thomas of the Temple of Spain, for use in his wars in
France. Henry later bought the ship from the Master of the Temple in
Spain for 200 marks and kept it. Presumably the Templars in Spain had a
few ships, if they could spare this one. As mentioned above in the
account of his abortive crusade, the Templars of Aragorn accompanied
James I of Aragorn as he set sail for the east, but their ship’s rudder
broke, and they did not have a spare. This does not indicate great naval
expertise or investment." [pp. 192-93.]

Sergeant-Brother Roger de Flor commanded the Falcon, assisting in the evacuation of Acre in 1291. Found guilty of profiteering and sentenced to hang, he left the Falcon at Marsailles. [p. 193.]

"The fact that the Templars' Spanish great ship also came equipped with
its own captain, Brother Thomas, who remained with it after Henry III
had bought it, indicates that this was the normal form of organization
for the Templars' ships. Theoretically they belonged to the Order but
were run as individual units under Brothers who were experienced
sailers. When they were not being used by the Order, for example for
carrying pilgrims or produce, they engaged in privateering and other
commercial enterprises." [p. 194.]

"[Pope] Nicholas IV also ordered the Masters of the Temple and Hospital
to build up a fleet, and in January 1292 he authorized them to use their
ships to assist the Armenians. In 1293 the Templars and Venetians
equipped six galleys in Venice to help protect Cyprus against the
Muslims: there were four Venetian and two Templar ships. On the basis
that this was the maximum number of ships that the Templars could find
for this important project, a fleet of two is hardly impressive." [p.
199.]

["The Templar pilgrim fleet was based at Marseilles. In 1233 they were
granted the right to dock their ships there and carry pilgrims to the
Holy Land, but after protests by local ship owners this was restricted
to two ships a year, leaving for Easter and in August. They were allowed
to carry 1,500 pilgrims in these, and to keep one ship in the port for
their own use." Supplying the Crusader states, Barber. p. 322]

["Their main fleet was at La Rochelle, and it was this fleet, berthed
away from the theatre of war, that was part of the maritime network
linking the Order in the British Isles with the continent. We know the
class and names of at least two of the ships plying between La Rochelle
and the south coast. In 1230 Henry III issued a licence to the Templars'
ship La Templere from La Rochelle to land, bringing wine and
victuals for the brothers. A little later another licence was given to
the Master and the brothers of the Temple for the vessel called La Buzzard to come into port. (Calender of Patent Rolls, 1225-1232). The Knights Templar in Britain, Evelyn Lord, p. 120.]

["When on official business the Patent Rolls show that the constable of
Dover Castle was ordered to provide a ship for the Templars." The Knights Templar in Britain, Evelyn Lord, p. 121.]

Philip IV’s new advisor, William de Nogaret, compiled the accusations
against Pope Boniface: he was an heretic, he practised simony, he had
been elected by trickery, he was advised by a demon, he practiced
sodomy, and he believed the French did not have souls. [p. 201.]

"The original charges of 1307 were framed by one Esquin de Floyran of Béziers, prior of Montfaucon." [p. 214.]

"Esquiu’s original charges fitted the pattern of accusations of
devil-worship brought against leading political figures of this period
such as Pope Boniface VIII and Walter Langton. Like these his
accusations were presumably promoted by a personal grievance which had
no obvious connection with the accusations." [p. 215.]

"Yet the history of the Order produced no public sexual scandals, unlike
other religious Orders." "In fictional literature the Templars were
depicted helping lovers, but this image was based more on their love of
God than on their love of women. There were no scandals in the Order of
the Temple to compare with events in the Dominican friary and nunnery at
Zamora, for instance, where the friars apparently regarded the sisters'
house as a source of women for their pleasure. No one wrote stories
about the Templars like the French poet Rutebuef’s scandalous story
about the Franciscan friars, 'Brother Denise', in which a friar seduces a
young girl by telling her she will save her soul by doing everything he
tells her. The Templars were never accused of systematically raping
women, as were the Teutonic knights." Sexual relations with a man would
result in automatic expulsion from the Order of the Temple. The only
case of sodomy ever recorded within the Order resulted in the
imprisonment of two of those involved, while the third escaped and went
over to the Muslims. Even during the trial of the Templars, when
Brothers were being actively encouraged to confess to the practice of
sodomy, very few were prepared to do so: of all the testimonies during
the trial (over nine hundred in all), I have identified only three
confessions of sodomy that I would consider as possibly genuine. This is
remarkably few for a large international organization, given that
contemporaries regarded the traditional monastic Orders such as the
Benedictines and Cistercians as being rife with active homosexual
practices." [p. 140.]

"Walter Map, who knew plenty of derogatory stories about the Templars,
the Hospitallers, the papacy and the Cistercians, also told some stories
which implied that the Templars were outstanding Christians." [p. 141.]

"There is no evidence that the Templars were ever involved in heretical movements in Europe." [p. 158.]

"The Templars' innocence of the charges brought against them in 1307-8
has been established since the work of the American historian Henry
Charles Lea, published in 1889. Historians now see the charges as an
exercise in political propaganda." [p. 207.]

Reference: Henry Charles Lea, A History of the Inquisition in the Middle Ages
(3 vols, New York, Macmillan, 1887-9 and reprints), vol. 3 esp. p. 334.
See also Malcolm Barber, 'Propaganda in the Middle Ages: the Charges
Against the Templars', Nottingham Medieval Studies, 17 (1973), pp. 42-57

"Matthew Paris’s dislike of the Miltary Orders of the Temple and the
Hospital stemmed partly from their connection with King Henry III, whom
Matthew disliked and whose policies he disapproved of. In the same way,
William of Tyre’s and Walter Map’s criticism stemmed partly from the
Orders' connections with the papacy and their exemptions from the
bishops' authority. As the Orders relied on these rulers for their
continuing existence and protection, this was a criticism which they
could hardly avoid." [p. 178.]

"Until the eleventh century the Church had not taken witchcraft and
magic terribly seriously: once active paganism had died out in western
Europe, witchcraft was viewed as little more than a collection of
superstitious practices indulged in by deluded old women. It could be
dangerous, but it was not a major threat to society as a whole. However
with the discovery of the scientific classical Greek and Arabic texts in
the library of Toledo (captured by Alfonso VI of León -Castille in
1085), this attitude changed. For part and parcel with this ancient
science were magical texts, based on mathamatics and the study of the
stars and planets, and on the innate qualities of plants, stones and
animals." [p. 209.]

"The group most notorious for their involvement in magic during the
Middle Ages were the secular priests." "The other group with a
particular interest in magic was the literati, the educated officials who provided the backbone of royal government." {p. 212.]

"There
is no evidence at all that the Templars had any knowledge of science,
and certainly they had no knowledge of magic; medieval magic was a
supremely literate science, recorded and performed in Latin, whereas the
Templers in general were remarkably illiterate...." [p. 12.]

"Most of the Brothers of the Order came from the lower ranks of knights
or were not of knightly descent at all; many were craftsmen, or people
who performed ordinary agricultural tasks such as herding sheep and
cattle." [p. 2.]

"For the most part these people were not educated; the knights and squires could read their own language but not Latin. [p. 3.]

["In the west the members of the Order were monks adhering to their vows
of chastity, poverty and obedience, observing silence within the
preceptory precincts, and hearing the offices throughout the day and
night." "There is no evidence in the 1308 inventories of any
intellectual or literary activity." The Knights Templar in Britain, Evelyn Lord, p. 108.]

"The charge that the Templars venerated [not worshipped] a head was
true, since the Order did venerate the heads of at least two female
martyrs, St Euphemia and one of St Ursula’s maidens, the former in the
East and the latter in Paris. These relics were well known, often seen
and fully accounted for." [p. 213.]

"The so-called 'Templars' head'
was probably the head of St Euphemia. The Draper of the Order and two
knights stated during the trial of the Order on Cyprus that they had not
heard of any idols in the Order, but the Order had the head of St
Euphemia." [p. 147.]

"Brother William of Arreblay, former almoner to King Philip IV of
France, testified that he had often seen on the alter in the Temple of
Paris a silver head, and the leading officials of the Order adored it.
He understood that this was the head of one of the 11,000 virgins
martyred with St. Ursula at Cologne...." [p. 149.]

"As the charges against the Templars had no basis in previous criticism,
and were clearly ’standard' accusations, why did anyone believe them?
The answer to this is two-fold. First, hardly anyone outside the domains
of France did believe them. Secondly, within France the charges were carefully grounded in the actual activities of the Templars." [p. 213.]

"In short, the charges were ingeniously devised to make the most of the
Templars' weak points, to undermine their strong points and to make it
impossible for them to escape." [p. 214.]

"Very little third-party evidence was heard during the French trial. On
Cyprus, third-party evidence was heard at length and was virtually
unanimous: the charges were absolutely false." [p. 216.]

"... we have to ask why [Roslin] chapel is associated with the Templars
when the Order was suppressed 100 years before it was built. The key to
this is the gravestone of William St Clair, who died fighting the Moors
in Spain whilst taking Robert the Bruce’s heart to be buried in the Holy
Land. This has a floriated cross on it that is thought to be the emblem
of the Templars. This ancestor of the St Clairs is thought to have been
a Templar. Further back in time there is a tradition that Hugh de
Payens, the founder of the Order, was married to a Katherine St Clair." The Knights Templar in Britain, Evelyn Lord, p. 153.

["the heart was removed on his instructions and taken by Sir James
Douglas on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. Douglas was killed on the way
(1330)..." Encyclopaedia Britannica, v. 10, p. 104]

"The Knights Templars in the British Island had little or no experience
of open battle and why should they have been supporting Bruce against
Edward II when on the whole Edward had been particularly lenient towards
them?" The Knights Templar in Britain, Evelyn Lord, p. 154.

"Henry and William St Clair testified against the Templars, reporting
that they had heard 'things against the brother’s secret receptions.'" The Knights Templar in Britain, Evelyn Lord, p. 201.

Modern Day Knights Templar: the Masons

Who are the Masons?

In the months following publication, The Templars, Two Kings and a Pope was favorably reviewed in the Masons’ Knight Templar Magazine,
lauding the novel’s historical accuracy. I also received a number of
reviews and comments from present day knights templar, both Masons and
non-Masons. Masons commented on how the novel described the origins of
their organization, and how they now had confirmation of the link
between the Masons and the Templars’ secret Brotherhood, based on the
concepts and symbols in their practice. I learned that they become
knights templar in their uppermost degrees, which is around the 30th
degree in the Scottish Rite, the York Rite, and the blue degrees.
Subsequent degrees after being dubbed knight templar are higher ranks of
knighthood. they do have secrets that revolve around their Gnostic
esoteric foundation, what is also known as the ancient mysteries, and
just like the Brotherhood before them, they are dedicated to serving
mankind and fomenting religious tolerance. Their recorded history goes
back to the early 1700’s, although their legends speak of a beginning in
Scotland in the early 1300’s, starting from a guild of stoneworkers,
just as my novel describes. The reason for the absence of documentation
before the 1700’s has to do with the British civil war when the Puritans
ascended to power, and tried to wipe out anything they considered a
heresy by burning books and imprisoning and killing people. They
succeeded in suppressing all Gnostic organizations. It’s clear that
that’s what happened to the Masons, they disappeared during the reign of
the Puritans and made a comeback in the early 1700’s, when they
reinvented themselves.

Templar and Masonic Symbols

These symbols confirmed that the Masons, at
least from the 30th Degree on up in which they are initiated as Knights
Templar, are linear descendants from the Templars’ secret Brotherhood.
The Templar Cross, the “Croix Rose” or Red Cross, is widely used and
originally called Rose Croix (grammatically incorrect in modern French).
All four extremities are the same size which is a Gnostic symbol for
balance. The symbol of the rose is also used, which for the Brotherhood
meant the Christ consciousness. In one scene in the novel I describe how
Jesus’ prison cell was permeated with a faint scent of roses. This made
perfect sense to the 33 Degree Masons. In old French, the color red was
called “rose,” also the name of the flower, which makes the name of the
Templar cross and why it was red, code for the Christ consciousness.
Gnostics believed that this was a state every person could achieve.

The Christ consciousness was the perfect state of balance, which
they termed Beauseant, literally “be whole,” in the Lingua Franca, the
old french the Templars spoke. This term is presently widely used by the
Masons. The other symbol of balance, which the Masons also widely use,
is what looks like a Star of David, comprised by two spades, one upward
or male, one downward, or female. This means the coming together of the
male and female in all of us. The Gnostic faith balances the female
aspect of God, Sophia, with the male, Christ; which we will all embody
at some point when we reach Beauseant, symbolized by the Templars’ flag,
black and white stripes of equal size, and a theme still used by the
Masons.

How the Templars Connected with The Masons in the 14th Century

So, how did the connection between the
Templars’ Brotherhood and the Masons take place? In the research I
conducted for my novel I found that once they left the Holy Land, the
Templars and The Brotherhood found themselves embroiled in a covert and
intense war against the king of France, Philip IV to keep him from
taking over the Holy Roman Empire. To accomplish this he first needed
both the Order of the Temple and the King of England out of the way,
because they could stop him, and he also needed their money.

The Brotherhood had to act quickly. If
Philip invaded England there was no stopping him. They realized that
this was first in the French king’s list. They came next. They needed
something to distract him, a war that would pull him away from England.
They turned to Flanders, what is today Belgium. It was ruled by a count,
a nominal subject of the French monarch. The county was split along
ethnic lines; for centuries the French speakers and the Dutch had been
at odds. There were also very powerful guilds of textile workers, for it
was the processing of wool that made Flanders. The nobility was very
weak and easy prey for a rising working class.

The Brotherhood decided to approach the
Dutch-speaking guilds, train them, and use them to fight the French.
This worked out perfectly. The "Battle of the Golden Spurs" saw the
defeat of the powerful French cavalry by lowly infantry. This battle and
what led to it are graphically described in the novel, along with the
weapons, training and tactics, for I feel this is a very crucial episode
in Templar history.

In the book I lead into the Flemish
excursion with a venture by two of the main characters (fashioned after
real historical figures) that find them working with weavers who
moonlight as entertainers at fairs. This gives them the idea for
Flanders, the possibility of using the powerful guilds. I’m sure that
something along these lines took place; some incident that led The
Brotherhood to look into the guilds, for otherwise the social divide was
so strong at this time in history that such a working arrangement was
unthinkable.

After Flanders, The Brotherhood continued to
work with the guilds. When they reached Scotland, it was just natural
that they would link up with them. In the novel, this happens through a
sergeant, a natural link between the noble knights and the working
class. It makes sense that the Brotherhood would seek out the most
powerful guild around, which was made up of learned men, men who built
cathedrals and bridges and not only could read and write, but were also
relatively sophisticated. What the Brotherhood needed, was an
organization they could infiltrate and control so they could find a safe
haven for “The Knowing,” Jesus’ secret teachings. It’s evident that
they had in their possession a copy of Jesus’ actual writing, a Jesus
Gospel, and they also needed a hiding place for it.

They connected with the Masons and passed on their secrets.

In the 16th century when the puritans rose to power in Britain, most
of the written records of the Masons and other Gnostic and
non-traditional Christian denominations, were destroyed. The Masons had
to reinvent themselves in the 17th century, mostly from what was passed
down as legend. In the course of the years some misconceptions came into
play, including a dash of Egyptology, the result of the Egypt obsession
that ran through Europe in the 19th century. But surprisingly, the main
body of Jesus’ secret teachings did survive, and are being practiced by
present day 33 Degree Masons, and also by their offshoot, the
Rosicrucians.

Non-Mason Knights Templar

Besides the Masons’ knights templar, the
novel was also welcomed by a number of world-wide knight templar
organizations, based in the US and England. They too viewed The Templars, Two Kings and a Pope as documenting their history, and were glad for information on what it was like to be a knight templar in the middle ages.
The one organization that appears to be the oldest, and could have a
direct connection to the original knights templar besides the Masons, is
the Hereditary Knights Templar of Britannia.

However, the original knights templar were monks, and needless to
say, no modern templar today is a monk. That life style ended when the
last of the original templars died, sometime in the 14th century.

A Brief History of the Medieval Knights Templar

The Sovereign Military Order of the Temple of Jerusalem (OSMTH) is a
modern-day ecumenical Christian knighthood. With its beginnings in
1804, the early 19th century, it does not claim 'direct descent' from
the historical medieval Order itself -- the subject to which we will now
turn.The
medieval Knights Templar, best known to us today as the famed warriors
of the Crusades, were a devout military religious Order that uniquely
combined the roles of knight and monk in a way the Western medieval
world had never seen before. Originally they were known as the Poor
Knights of Christ and the Temple of Solomon, or, more simply, as the
Knights Templar. In a famous letter written in the 1130s, In Praise of
the New Knighthood, St Bernard of Clairvaux elevated the Templar Order
above all other Orders of the day, establishing the image of the
Templars as a fierce spiritual militia for Christ. He regarded them as a
"new species of knighthood, previously unknown in the secular world..."
To him, they were a unique combination of knight and monk; to later
historians, they were the first military order, soon imitated by the
Knights Hospitaller, by several Spanish orders and, by the end of the
12th century, by the Teutonic Knights. As a holy militia fighting for
Christ, the Templars were willing to put aside the usual temptations of
ordinary secular life for an arduous, dedicated life of service. Ever
since then, the legacy of the Templars has been, first and foremost, the
concept of service. The Templars officially originated in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem
in 1118 A.D., when nine knights, mainly French, vowed to protect
pilgrims on the dangerous roads leading to Jerusalem. These courageous
knights gained the favor of King Baldwin II of Jerusalem who granted
them part of his palace for their headquarters, which was located in the
southeastern part of the Temple Mount, called "Solomon's Temple".
Encouraged by King Baldwin II and Warmund of Picquigny, Patriarch of
Jerusalem, they were generally seen as complementary to the Hospitallers
(recognized as an Order of the Church by the papacy in 1113, but not
militarized until the 1130s), who cared for sick and weary pilgrims in
their convent in Jerusalem. The Templars' services were welcomed and
greatly appreciated. But it is important to realize that at this early
juncture when they were based at the Temple Mount area, the Templars
were not yet an official monastic Order---the protagonists were seculars
imbued with a desire to fulfill the biblical injunction to love thy
neighbour, but they were not yet a monastic Order. During the first nine
years of the Order (1119-28), contrary to assumptions often made today,
the Templars would not have been wearing their trademark white mantles,
as they began wearing them after the church Council of Troyes in 1129
when they were given a religious Rule and a white mantle. The famous red
cross on their mantle was added later when Pope Eugenius III (1145-53)
allowed them to wear it as a symbol of Christian martyrdom. With only nine knights at their inception, scholars acknowledge that
it seems as though no major efforts were made to recruit any new members
until around 1128, when most of the original knights had returned to
France and the Council of Troyes began (Jan. 1129) and they became
officially recognized by the papacy. By the 1170s, there were about 300
knights based in the Kingdom of Jerusalem itself and more in other
areas., and by the 1180s, there were at least 600 knights in Jerusalem
alone. After 1129, the Order grew exponentially with many thousands of
knights and it then became increasingly powerful. At the Council of Troyes in Champagne, the status of the Templar
Order underwent a dramatic change.Thanks to the significant contribution
of Bernard of Clairvaux, the knights were then officially accepted by
Matthew of Albano, the papal legate. This recognition was quite
extraordinary for the times, as for such a tiny Order of only nine men
to get this type of recognition was rather unusual, as many other Orders
of the day had to wait much longer to achieve a similar status. At the
Council of Troyes, the Templars were given a proper Rule, written in
Latin, which ran to 72 clauses. The impetus given by papal approval and
the extraordinary publicity generated by the visits of the leaders to
France, England and Scotland in the months before the council ensured
that the "New Knighthood" would long outlive its founders. Papal recognition at Troyes was followed by the issue of three key
bulls, which established the Temple as a privileged Order under Rome.
Omne Datum Optimum (1139) consolidated the Order's growing material base
by allowing spoils taken in battle to be retained for the furtherance
of the holy war, placing donations directly under papal protection, and
granting exemption from payment of tithes. It also strengthened the
structure of the Order by making all members answerable to the Master
and by adding a new class of Templar priests to the existing
organization of knights and sergeants. The Templars could now possess
their own oratories, where they could hear divine office and bury their
dead. Milites Templi (1144) ordered the clergy to protect the Templars
and encouraged the faithful to contribute to their cause, while at the
same time allowing the Templars to make their own collections once a
year, even in areas under interdict. Milita Dei (1145) consolidated the
Order's independence of the local clerical hierarchy by giving the
Templars the right to take tithes and burial fees and to bury their dead
in their own cemeteries. As these privileges indicate, during the 1130s, the fledging Order
had attracted increasing numbers of major donors, for it proved to be
especially popular with that sector of the French aristocracy which held
castles and estates and could mobilize vassals, albeit on a modest
scale. In fact, the scale of this sudden, unprecented rise was
extraordinary, something hardly seen before or since. The rulers of
Aragon and Portugal, confronted directly with the problems of warfare on
a volatile frontier, realized their military value more quickly than
most others. The Templars began to accumulate a substantial landed base
in the West, not only in Francia, Provence, Iberia and England, where
they were first known, but also in Italy, Germany and Dalmatia and, with
the Latin conquests of Cyprus from 1191 and of the Morea from 1204, in
those regions as well. By the late 13th century they may have had as
many as 870 castles, preceptories and subsidiary houses spread across
Latin Christendom. During the 12th and 13th centuries these properties
were built into a network of support which provided men, horses, money
and supplies for the Templars in the East. The
development of a role as bankers arose out of these circumstances, for
they were well placed to offer credit and change specie through their
holdings in both east and west. It was a short step to move into more
general finance, unconnected to crusading activity by the 1290s their
house in Paris could offer a deposit bank with a cash desk open on a
daily basis and specialist accountancy services of great value to
contemporary secular administrations. Thus, the Templars became the
bankers to nobles, kings, and Popes as well as to pilgrims on their way
to and from Jerusalem and other holy sites. Our familiar "traveller's
check" today is a modern-day example of using a 'letter of credit' –just
as the Templars did in the 12th century, in medieval times. The Templar
structure was cemented by effective communications including its own
Mediterranean shipping. They had many galleys and like the Hospitallers,
took part in naval warfare at times, too. They even had their own
Admiral by 1301. Together with the Hospitallers, the Knights Templar became the
permanent defenders of the Latin settlements of the East, increasingly
entrusted with key castles and fiefs. By the 1180s, there were
approximately 600 knights in Jerusalem, Tripoli and Antioch, and perhaps
three times that number of sergeants. No major battle took place
without their participation. In the 13th century, the Order was the only
institution capable of building great castles like Athlit (Pilgrims'
Castle) (1217-21) on the coast to the south of Haifa and Safed (early
1240s) dominating the Galilean Hills. Such military and financial power,
together with the extensive papal privileges, gave them immense
influence in the Latin East and, at times, led to conflict with other
institutions. The Latin Rule of 1129, which had been influenced by a monastic
establishment with little experience of practical crusading, soon proved
inadequate for such an expanding organization. New sections, written in
French, were added, first in the 1160s, when 202 clauses definted the
hierarchy of the Order and laid down its military functions and then,
within the next twenty years, a futher 107 clauses on the discipline of
the convent and 158 clauses on the holding of chapters and the penance
system. Between 1257 and 1267, 113 clauses set out case histories which
could be used as precedents in the administration of penances'. The
existence of a version of the Rule in Catalan, dating from after 1268,
shows that efforts were made to ensure that its contents were widely
understood within the Order. Although the Order never underwent a
thorough internal reform, these developments indicate that the Templars
were not oblivious to the need to maintain standards. The Templar Order's administration was structured hierarchically. The
Grand Master was based at the Order's headquarters in the Holy Land,
along with the other major officers, each of whom had their own staff.
The Seneschal was the Grand Master's deputy; in ceremonies he carried
the famed beauseant, the Templars' black-and-white banner. Like the
Grand Master, the Seneschal had his own staff and horses. The Marshal
was the chief military officer, responsible for the individual
commanders and the horses, arms, equipment and anything else involving
military operations. He also had authority in obtaining and ordering
supplies, which was critically important at the time of the Crusades.
The Commander of the Kingdom of Jerusalem was the treasurer of the Order
and was in charge of the strong room. He shared power with the Grand
Master in a way that prevented either from having too much control over
funds. The Draper issued clothes and bed linen and could distribute
gifts made to the order. He was not only keeper of the famed white
mantles but also ensured that every brother was dressed appropriately.
These four, along with the Grand Master, were the major officers of the
Order, although there seems to have been some local variation where
needed. Under these main officers were other Templar commanders with
specific regional responsibilities, such as the commanders of the cities
of Jerusalem. Daily administration of the Order's regional houses was
governed by various officials called bailies, and the officer in charge
was called the baili. So, the Templar Order consisted of members in a
variety of positions performing many different functions. It even hired
some assistants from outside the Order, and, contrary to popular belief,
only a minority of members were actually full-fledged Knights. The
loss of Acre in 1291 and the Mamluk conquest of Palestine and Syria
have often been seen as a turning-point in Templar history, for the
Order was apparently left without a specific role in a society still
profoundly imbued with the idea of its own organic unity. Indeed, the
failure of the military orders to prevent the advance of Islam had
attracted criticism since at least the 1230s with the loss of the
Christian hold on the mainland, opponents were provided with a specific
focus for their attacks. The more constructive of these critics
advocated a union of the Temple and the Hospital as the first step in a
thorough reassessment of their activities, although the Orders
themselves showed little enthusiasm for such schemes. There was,
however, no suggestion that either order be abolished. In fact, the
Templars continued to pursue the holy war with some vigor from their
based in Cyprus for they did not see the events of 1291 as inevitably
presaging the decine of crusading. The attack on them by Philippe IV,
King of France, in October 1307, ostensibly on the grounds of "vehement
suspicion" of heresy and blasphemy, therefore owes more to the potent
combination of a king afflicted by a morbid religiosity on the one hand
and an administration in severe financial trouble on the other, than it
does to any failings of the Templars. In fact, the Templars (unlike the
Hospitallers) had never previously been accused of heresy. In the end,
neither the limited intervention by Pope Clement V nor an energetic
defense by some Templars, could save the Order, which was suppressed by
the papal bull Vox in excelso in 1312. Its goods and properties were
then transferred over to the Hospitallers. Although the Order itself was
suppressed, many of the knights fled and went underground, or joined
other Orders. Their extraordinary legacy and memory still live on today,
nearly nine centuries later.

Key Medieval Templar Order Events

1118-9

Official beginnings and emergence of the
Order of the Temple; nine knights, led by Hugh de Payns, the first
Templar Grand Master, present themselves to King Baldwin II in Jerusalem

1119-28

First nine knights remain in the Holy Land

1128

By this time, the early Templars return from the Holy Land; beginning of the Order's unprecedented rise and influence

If you
are looking for information to sort the fact from the fiction in the history
of the Knights Templar, or to contact others who
share your interest in this most fascinating of organisations, or even should
you wish to commit yourself to being part of the modern Templar community,
then this website will be of interest to you.

This is
the official website of the Grand Priory of Knights Templar in England and Wales
-
Order of the Templeof Jerusalem.

We are
a chivalric and interdenominational association of Christians; men and women,
clergy and lay, from all walks of life. We take our inspiration from
the highest ideals of the medieval Order of Knights Templar, founded by Hugh
de Payens in 1119.

The
international umbrella organisation to which our Grand Priory belongs - OSMTH:
Knights Templar International - is recognised as a Non Governmental
Organisation (NGO) in Special Consultative Status with the Economic and
Social Council of the United Nations. This is on account of its
activities in providing humanitarian relief and promoting inter-faith
dialogue. This is achieved both by raising much needed funds and also by
putting the volunteer efforts and expertise of its members at the disposal of
good causes around the world.

Alongside
a full programme of events, both national and local, we take a particular
interest in raising charitable funds to support and develop pilgrimage and
heritage projects.

Please explore this site and – if you require more
information – please feel free to use the contact facilities to get in touch
with us.

Godfrey
Fowler - Grand Prior

The
Grand Priory of Knights Templar in England and Wales

Is a chivalric and
interdenominational association of Christians; men and women, clergy and
lay, from all walks of life.

Takes its inspiration from the
highest ideals of the medieval Order of Knights Templar, as founded by
Hugh de Payens in 1119.

Belongs to the international umbrella
organisation - OSMTH:
Knights Templar International, which is recognised as a Non
Governmental Organisation in Special Consultative Status with the
Economic and Social Council of the United Nations.

Directly supports two charitable
trusts: the Templar Heritage Trust (THT),
which currently operates under the umbrella of the Charities Aid
Foundation; and the Templar Pilgrimage Trust (TPT), which is
separately registered.

Has members throughout the world.

Membership is open to professed
Christians, over the age of eighteen, who are prepared to commit
themselves to the traditions of the monastic rules of life contained in
the "Rule of the Templars", and "In Praise of the New
Knighthood", both prepared for the medieval order under the guidance
of St Bernard Clairvaux.

It is three years since 7 knights
formed The Commandery of Jacques de Molay1314. We have
used this time wisely and we are pleased to report that the
Commandery has now well exceeded the numerical, structural and
spiritual requirements for the establishment of a Grand Priory.
Accordingly, The Autonomous Grand Priory of Scotland was
inaugurated at Balgonie Castle, Fife on 9th May 2009. Our
Commander, Chevalier George Stewart KGCTpl was democratically
elected to serve as Grand Prior for a period of five years. This
event is very significant and bodes well for Templarism in
Scotland.

New Preceptory: St Bernard of Clairvaux

A New Preceptory named after St Bernard of Clairvaux
was
inaugurated on 20th February 2009 at Hamilton Old Parish
Church.
Chev Robert Hunter KCTpl has been appointed Preceptor.
This Preceptory meets every month with the exception of July and
August.

The Commandery of Jacques de Molay 1314 also meets every month
with the exception of July and August at Hamilton Old Parish
Church, Hamilton, Scotland.

We are fortunate to have an excellent meeting venue at
Hamilton
Old Parish Church. The Autonomous Grand Priory of Scotland,
Scottish Knights Templar, wish to record our grateful thanks for
the use of The Session Room. The Reverend John M. A. Thomson T.D.,
J.P., B.D., ThM. and The Kirk Session of Hamilton Old Parish
Church have made our Templars feel most welcome.

On Saturday 15th May a team from
the Grand Priory gave a talk and took part in an hour long
question and answer session on the Knights Templar at
Paisley Abbey's Medieval Fair as part of
Cluny 2010. More details to come.